Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Beauvoir and the ambiguity of “ambiguity” in ethics
- 1 Beauvoir’s place in philosophical thought
- 2 Reading Simone de Beauvoir with Martin Heidegger
- 3 The body as instrument and as expression
- 4 Beauvoir and Merleau-Ponty on ambiguity
- 5 Bergson’s influence on Beauvoir’s philosophical methodology
- 6 Philosophy in Beauvoir’s fiction
- 7 Complicity and slavery in The Second Sex
- 8 Beauvoir on Sade: making sexuality into an ethic
- 9 Beauvoir and feminism: interview and reflections
- 10 Life-story in Beauvoir’s memoirs
- 11 Beauvoir on the ambiguity of evil
- 12 Simone de Beauvoir: (Re)counting the sexual difference
- 13 Beauvoir and biology: a second look
- 14 Beauvoir’s Old Age
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Beauvoir and feminism: interview and reflections
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Beauvoir and the ambiguity of “ambiguity” in ethics
- 1 Beauvoir’s place in philosophical thought
- 2 Reading Simone de Beauvoir with Martin Heidegger
- 3 The body as instrument and as expression
- 4 Beauvoir and Merleau-Ponty on ambiguity
- 5 Bergson’s influence on Beauvoir’s philosophical methodology
- 6 Philosophy in Beauvoir’s fiction
- 7 Complicity and slavery in The Second Sex
- 8 Beauvoir on Sade: making sexuality into an ethic
- 9 Beauvoir and feminism: interview and reflections
- 10 Life-story in Beauvoir’s memoirs
- 11 Beauvoir on the ambiguity of evil
- 12 Simone de Beauvoir: (Re)counting the sexual difference
- 13 Beauvoir and biology: a second look
- 14 Beauvoir’s Old Age
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
INTERVIEW
Brison: Yesterday, you agreed that it's not enough for women to put themselves in exactly the same situation as men in order for them to be liberated. But you didn't say what you think we need to do now. I'd like to ask you the same question that you asked Sartre, a question it seemed to me he avoided: “Should women completely reject the masculine universe or should they find themselves a place in it? Should they steal their tools or change them? I'm thinking of science as well as language, the arts. Every value is marked with the seal of masculinity.”
de beauvoir: That’s a lot of questions in one. I think that feminists, at least those I’m involved with, want to change not only women’s situation but also the world. That is, these are women who would like to see a certain dismantling of society and who think that if feminism were victorious, if the oppression of women were completely eliminated, well, society would be shaken to its foundation. This cannot be accomplished without other kinds of action, for example, actions supporting class struggle and immigrants, in other words, all the actions one can imagine in favor of society. They must all be linked. So, it’s a matter not of women taking men’s place in this world, but of their being emancipated in such a way as to simultaneously change this world.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Simone de Beauvoir , pp. 189 - 207Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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