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Time Travels:

Feminism, Nature, Power
Front Cover
4 Reviews
Duke University Press, Jun 1, 2005 - Social Science - 257 pages
DIVRecently the distinguished feminist theorist Elizabeth Grosz has turned her critical acumen toward rethinking time and duration. Time Travels brings her trailblazing essays together to show how reconceptualizing temporality transforms and revitalizes key scholarly and political projects. In these essays, Grosz demonstrates how imagining different relations between the past, present, and future alters understandings of social and scientific projects ranging from theories of justice to evolutionary biology, and she explores the radical implications of the reordering of these projects for feminist, queer, and critical race theories.

Grosz’s reflections on how rethinking time might generate new understandings of nature, culture, subjectivity, and politics are wide ranging. She moves from a compelling argument that Charles Darwin’s notion of biological and cultural evolution can potentially benefit feminist, queer, and antiracist agendas to an exploration of modern jurisprudence’s reliance on the notion that justice is only immanent in the future and thus is always beyond reach. She examines Henri Bergson’s philosophy of duration in light of the writings of Gilles Deleuze, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and William James, and she discusses issues of sexual difference, identity, pleasure, and desire in relation to the thought of Deleuze, Friedrich Nietzsche, Michel Foucault, and Luce Irigaray. Together these essays demonstrate the broad scope and applicability of Grosz’s thinking about time as an undertheorized but uniquely productive force./div

  

What people are saying - Write a review

Review: Time Travels: Feminism, Nature, Power

User Review  - Niels - Goodreads

It's only towards the end that this book loses its hold, but until then the whole thing is joyful read - strange however that she manages to write about time and feminism and space without mentioning Virginia woolf. But perhaps that's just my favourite hobby. Read full review

Review: Time Travels: Feminism, Nature, Power

User Review  - Liza - Goodreads

"Pleasure is a crucial hinge, a bodily resource, that is of enormous strategic utility in the ongoing interplay and transformations of power and resistance. Pleasure is that which induces bodies to ... Read full review

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Contents

Introduction
1
PART I NATURE CULTURE AND THE FUTURE
11
PART II LAW JUSTICE AND THE FUTURE
53
PART III PHILOSOPHY KNOWLEDGE AND THE FUTURE
91
PART IV IDENTITY SEXUAL DIFFERENCE AND THE FUTURE
153
Notes
215
References
241
Index
253

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About the author (2005)

DIV

Elizabeth Grosz is Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at Rutgers University. She is the author of The Nick of Time: Politics, Evolution, and the Untimely (also published by Duke University Press); Architecture from the Outside: Essays on Virtual and Real Space; Space, Time, and Perversion: Essays on the Politics of Bodies; and Volatile Bodies: Toward a Corporeal Feminism. She is the editor of Becomings: Explorations in Time, Memory, and Futures.

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