Latina feminist phenomenology, multiplicity, and the self /
Mariana Ortega.
Albany, New York :
SUNY Press,
[2016]
xiii, 281 pages ;
23 cm
SUNY series, philosophy and race
Includes bibliographical references (pages 255-270) and index.
Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- The new mestiza and la nepantlera -- Being-between-worlds, being-in-worlds -- The phenomenology of world-traveling -- World- traveling, double-consciousness, and resistance -- Multiplicitous becomings : on identity, horizons, and coalitions -- Social location, identity, knowledge, and multiplicity -- Hometactics -- Afterword -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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"This original study intertwining Latina feminism, existential phenomenology, and race theory offers a new philosophical approach to understanding selfhood and identity. Focusing on writings by Gloriá Anzaldúa, María Lugones, and Linda Martín Alcoff, Mariana Ortega articulates a phenomenology that introduces a conception of selfhood as both multiple and singular. Her Latin feminist phenomenological approach can account for identities belonging simultaneously to different worlds, including immigrants, exiles, and inhabitants of borderlands. Ortega's project forges new directions not only in Latina feminist thinking on such issues as borders, mestizaje, marginality, resistance, and identity politics, but also connects this analysis to the existential phenomenology of Martin Heidegger and to such concepts as being-in-the-world, authenticity, and intersubjectivity. The pairing of the personal and the political in Ortega's work is illustrative of the primacy of lived experience in the development of theoretical understandings of who we are. In addition to bringing to light central metaphysical issues regarding the temporality and continuity of the self, Ortega models a practice of philosophy that draws from work in other disciplines and that recognizes the important contributions of Latina feminists and other theorists of color to philosophical pursuits"--Page 4 of cover.
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