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The Laugh of the Medusa by Helen Cixous: Part I |Feminism| Literary Theory| Ecriture Feminine
16:06
Helene Cixous in Perspective : "The Laugh of the Medusa"
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伪装成一棵树整蛊妹妹,结果妹妹当场怀疑人生竟要揍我?【两只马儿-恶搞姐妹】
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The Laugh of the Medusa- essay 📜📖
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Literature And Her
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Пікірлер: 14
@rajmarakishere
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Most elaborated explanation ever❤️
@chandramallikasarma7605
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Good work, carry on.
@Mr007004005
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Good one!
@usmritasvlog3120
2 ай бұрын
Good explanation
@reginanaidu2168
4 ай бұрын
Sister ~the end to the impossible...This was great.
@yurrasemshimray2375
10 ай бұрын
Tqsm it help a lot.
@LiteratureAndHer
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It's my pleasure✨
@Mohammedji-t2j3h5
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Nice explanation ❤
@afrozairin8438
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Thanks sister ❤
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Divine
@Sangeetha-c3z
9 ай бұрын
Translate to tamil explain pls mam
@oplkhan6410
10 ай бұрын
Ma'am Please tell me how can I get Original English text of this Essay "The laugh of the Medusa" please
@gauravsuyal5437
7 ай бұрын
VIEWPOINT The Laugh of the Medusa Helene Cixous Translated by Keith Cohen and Paula Cohen I shall speak about women’s writing: about what it will do. Woman must write her self: must write about women and bring women to writing, from which they have been driven away as violently as from their bodies-for the same reasons, by the same law, with the same fatal goal. Woman must put herself into the text-as into the world and into history-by her own movement. The future must no longer be determined by the past. I do not deny that the effects of the past are still with us. But I refuse to strengthen them by repeating them, to confer upon them an irremovability the equivalent of destiny, to confuse the biological and the cultural. Anticipation is imperative. Since these reflections are taking shape in an area just on the point of being discovered, they necessarily bear the mark of our time-a time during which the new breaks away from the old, and, more precisely, the (feminine) new from the old (la nouvelle de l’ancien). Thus, as there are no grounds for establishing a discourse, but rather an arid millennial ground to break, what I say has at least two sides and two aims: to break up, to destroy; and to foresee the unforeseeable, to project. I write this as a woman, toward women. When I say “woman,” I’m speaking of woman in her inevitable struggle against conventional man; and of a universal woman subject who must bring women to their senses This is a revised version of “Le Rire de la Méduse,” which appeared in L’Arc (1975), pp. 39-54. [Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 1976, vol. 1, no. 4] © 1976 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. 875 876 Cixous Laugh of the Medusa and to their meaning in history. But first it must be said that in spite of the enormity of the repression that has kept them in the “dark”-that dark which people have been trying to make them accept as their attribute-there is, at this time, no general woman, no one typical woman. What they have in common I will say. But what strikes me is the infinite richness of their individual constitutions: you can’t talk about a female sexuality, uniform, homogeneous, classifiable into codes-any more than you can talk about one unconscious resembling another. Women’s imaginary is inexhaustible, like music, painting, writing: their stream of phantasms is incredible. I have been amazed more than once by å description a woman gave me of a world all her own which she had been secretly haunting since early childhood. A world of searching, the elaboration of a knowledge, on the basis of a systematic experimentation with the bodily functions, a passionate and precise interrogation of her erotogeneity. This practice, extraordinarily rich and inventive, in particular as concerns masturbation, is prolonged or accompanied by a production of forms, a veritable aesthetic activity, each stage of rapture inscribing a resonant vision, a composition, something beautiful. Beauty will no longer be forbidden. I wished that that woman would write and proclaim this unique empire so that other women, other unacknowledged sovereigns, might exclaim: I, too, overflow; my desires have invented new desires, my body knows unheard-of songs. Time and again I, too, have felt so full of luminous torrents that I could burst-burst with forms much more beautiful than those which are put up in frames and sold for a stinking fortune. And I, too, said nothing, showed nothing; I didn’t open my mouth, I didn’t repaint my half of the world. I was ashamed. I was afraid, and I swallowed my shame and my fear. I said to myself: You are mad! What’s the meaning of these waves, these floods, these outbursts? Where is the ebullient, infinite woman who, immersed as she was in her naivete, kept in the dark about herself, led into self-disdain by the great arm of parental-conjugal phallocentrism, hasn’t been ashamed of her strength? Who, surprised and horrified by the fantastic tumult of her drives (for she was made to believe that a well-adjusted normal woman has a . . . divine composure), hasn’t accused herself of being a monster? Who, feeling a funny desire stirring inside her (to sing, to write, to dare to speak, in short, to bring out something new), hasn’t thought she was sick? Well, her shameful sickness is that she resists death, that she makes trouble. And why don’t you write? Write! Writing is for you, you are for you; your body is yours, take it. I know why you haven’t written. (And why I didn’t write before the age of twenty-seven.) Because writing is at once too high, too great for you, it’s reserved for the great-that is, for “great men”; and it’s “silly.” Besides, you’ve written a little, but in secret. And it,,, archive.org/details/thelaughofmedusa/page/879/mode/2up
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