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Lo femenino y lo sagrado

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Dos intelectuales y escritoras que se conocen desde los años 60 y comparten intereses y compromisos similares deciden compartir también la realización de un libro. En él tratan lo que les ha preocupado desde siempre, lo que se puede leer en sus trayectorias de intelectuales y novelistas, en la linde del inconsciente y del vínculo social, y que el fin del segundo milenio cargaba de actualidad: lo sagrado. Pero no la religión, ni su contrario, que es la negación atea, sino esa experiencia que las creencias amparan y explotan a la vez, en el punto de encuentro de la sexualidad y el pensamiento, del cuerpo y del sentido, que las mujeres realizan intensamente pero sin preocuparse por ello, y en la que les queda mucho por decir: ¿Existe lo sagrado específicamente femenino?

240 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1993

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About the author

Catherine Clément

130 books71 followers
Catherine Clément (born February 10, 1939) is a prominent French philosopher, novelist, feminist, and literary critic. She received a degree in philosophy from the prestigious Ecole Normale Supérieure, and studied under such luminaries as Claude Lévi-Strauss and Jacques Lacan, working in the fields of anthropology and psychoanalysis. A member of the school of French feminism, she has published books with writers Hélène Cixous and Julia Kristeva.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherin...

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Steven Godin.
2,806 reviews3,488 followers
May 15, 2020
The Feminine and the Sacred is a collection of letters between French philosophers Catherine Clément and Julia Kristeva over the course of a year, from November 1996 to October 1997. They collaborated from different countries - Clément mostly from Sénégal, Kristeva from France. This correspondence led to a somewhat disjointed discussion, as each author writes from her own experiences and expertise, and thus the content, methods, and metaphors used by Clément and Kristeva differ somewhat. They do not fully answer each other's questions for one thing, thus not coming to any ultimate conclusions regarding the feminine and the sacred. Clément's letters often focus on her time in Africa and India, relating myths, tales, and beliefs from Hinduism, Buddhism, African animism, and her own experiences with Judaism. She connects the sacred to social and political struggles against oppression in developing nations, and criticizes certain Western values and behaviors for their oppressive tendencies. Kristeva, on the other hand, often speaks of experiences with analysands in her psychoanalytic practice, of maternity, of love, and of Catholicism, theorizing the relationship of the Virgin Mary and female saints to the sacred. The book has a sense of two obviously worked up individuals passionate about what they write, moving along their own trajectories while trying to locate points of connection along the way. There are common themes present in what each writes, even if their explanations and approaches aren't the same. Of the two, Kristeva was the more cool and composed, while Clément felt at times like she wanted to lock horns. She clearly had her feathers ruffled somewhere along the lines, but who can say for what reason. What is lost in foregoing an otherwise more integrated engagement between the writers and their views, is made up for in the productivity of the space left open in between. And it's a big space. A space of inquiry that invites, and even to some extent requires, the reader to continue the discussion, or at least ponder deeply on one's own thoughts beyond the bounds of the text. For me, it was interesting whilst reading it, but I'll leave it at that. It's highly unlikely I will lose any sleep over the unresolved nature of what is raised.
Profile Image for Loulou11.
172 reviews17 followers
April 4, 2022
Cette correspondance demande un certain nombre de connaissances théologiques que je ne maîtrise que partiellement, certains noms et concepts m’étant inconnus.. ce qui a rendu ma lecture ardue et parfois je l’avoue un peu pénible.
Ce livre méritera une deuxième lecture d’ici quelques temps, certains passages sont extrêmement intéressants et denses.
Profile Image for Isadora Wagner.
147 reviews21 followers
May 15, 2014
An intriguing, if sometimes controversial, collection of letters between Julia Kristeva and Catherine Clement on feminine sexuality, religious rite, states of ecstasy, and the traditions of many female Christian mystics. Wide-ranging and eclectic. Of interest mainly to followers of Kristeva and those interested in gender and religion studies.
Profile Image for Sylvia Veronica.
17 reviews11 followers
August 5, 2011
This book provides a profound analysis of the sacred through a philosophical and anthropological perspective, a fascinating read.
452 reviews12 followers
July 18, 2024
The epistolary form this work takes makes it less a work of theory and more the unfolding of a conversation, thoughts not fully developed but hesitantly offered forth. Fascinating to watch the fault lines between Kristeva's and Clément's positions develop, though they both unfortunately seem to engage in some light orientalism. The O'Keeffe connection I do find compelling, though.
Profile Image for Sarah.
7 reviews4 followers
April 13, 2023
Really interesting, but as it is correspondence it can be difficult to follow the backwards and forwards. Very helpful for my dissertation!
Profile Image for kirsten.
385 reviews6 followers
March 17, 2009
did really like it. a recent trend is that i've been enjoying books v. more near the end and this one follows.
Profile Image for Steven Felicelli.
Author 3 books63 followers
May 31, 2013
Clement for some inexplicable reason is constantly jabbing at Kristeva and Kristeva stays on the sisterly higher ground

interesting dialogue - but kept wondering what Clement's problem was
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews