Introduction: Creating the Background for the Emergence of a New Human Being
Luce Irigaray
A Different Way of Bringing Up and Educating Children
1: How to Lead a Child to Flower: Luce Irigaray’s Philosophy of the Growth of Children
Jennifer Carter
2: What a Child Can Teach us
Maria Fannin
3: To Be Born a Girl?: Irigaray, Sexuate Identity and the Girl
Elspeth Mitchell
4: From Desire to Be Born to Desire for Being Together in the Philosophy of Luce Irigaray
Katarzyna Szopa
Constitution of a New Environment and Sociocultural Milieu
5: Heidegger, the Fourfold and Irigaray’s To Be Born: An Architectural Perspective
Andrea Wheeler
6: ‘Testimony Against the Whole’ - Examining the limits of Peace with Derrida and Irigaray
Harry Bregazzi
7:Politics of Relation, Politics of Love
Emma Jones
8: Original Wonder: An Irigarayan Reading of the Genesis Cosmology
Abigail Rine Favale
9: Faithful to Life
Phyllis Kaminski
Questioning the Philosophical Background of Our Culture
10: Re-founding Philosophy with Self-affection
Andrew Bevan
11: Can Our Being in the World Remain in the Neuter?
Christos Hadjioannou
12: On Nietzsche and Pregnancy: The Beginning of the Genesis of a New Human Being
Katrina Mitcheson
13: Nothing Against Natality
Mahon O’Brien
By Way of Epilogue: Some Words from the Contributors
Luce Irigaray
Luce Irigaray is one of the leading thinkers of our age. She is the author of more than thirty books translated into various languages, the most recent of which are Sharing the World (2008), In the Beginning, She Was (2012) and Through Vegetal Being (co-authored with Michael Marder, 2016). She is also the co-editor (with Michael Marder) of Building a New World (2015), a volume in which early-career researchers from her seminars explore new ways of thinking, in order to promote a world-wide community respectful of differences between the sexes, generations, cultures and traditions.
Mahon O'Brien is senior lecturer in philosophy at the University of Sussex, UK. His work is largely concerned with issues in phenomenology, in particular, the work of Martin Heidegger. He has published two books on Heidegger to date with another due to appear later this year. He is also interested in the history of philosophy more broadly and is currently working on a number of papers on Plato as well as some of the central themes in twentieth century phenomenology.
Christos Hadjioannou is IRC Postdoctoral Fellow at University College Dublin, Ireland. He completed a PhD in Philosophy at Sussex University, UK, in 2015. His thesis was entitled The Emergence of Mood in Heidegger’s Phenomenology. His main research interest lies in Heidegger’s philosophy, with an emphasis on the affective elements of his thought. He has co-edited a volume on Heidegger on Technology (Routledge, 2018), and is currently editing a volume on Heidegger on Affect (Palgrave, forthcoming).