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Topologies of Sexual Difference

Space in Philosophy and Visual Art After Irigaray

Louise Burchill Rebecca Hill (RMIT University) James Sares (University of Kentucky)

$88.95   $75.28

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English
State University of New York Press
02 April 2026
Brings together wide-ranging, interdisciplinary analyses of Luce Irigaray's rethinking of space with respect to sexual difference and the visual arts.

A rethinking of space is central to Luce Irigaray's philosophy of sexual difference. Topologies of Sexual Difference is the first edited collection to focus on this task through a sustained consideration of both Irigaray's critique of the Western tradition's systematic conflation of femininity and space and her transvaluative topological redeployment of space in theorizing sexual difference. Across thirteen chapters, Irigarayan space is thematized as porous, fluid, continuous, and self-differentiating. Contributors engage with the origins of life, affect, the aesthetics of the maternal and placental, an Irigarayan morphology inclusive of trans embodiment, and—in a rare focus—the expression of sexuate specificity in creative practice. Topologies of Sexual Difference thus demonstrates the fundamental importance of Irigaray's rethinking of space for Western philosophy and the visual arts.
Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   State University of New York Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   417g
ISBN:   9798855803679
Series:   SUNY series in Gender Theory
Pages:   294
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments List of Abbreviations (Works by Irigaray) Introduction Louise Burchill and Rebecca Hill Part One: Differential Space 1. Chora Reconsidered in View of a Topology of Sexual Difference Kristin Sampson 2. ""Putting the Accent Back on Space"": Irigaray's Topology, Chora, and Feminine Jouissance Louise Burchill 3. ""The Deepest and Most Initial Vital Structure Is Topological"": A Feminist Philosophy of the Origins of Cellular Life with Irigaray and Simondon Annu Dahiya 4. Carnal Being-with: Irigaray in Dialogue with Heidegger Jennifer Carter Part Two: Of Sensibility and the Elemental 5. Affective Poiesis: Irigaray's Elemental Ontology Ellen Mortensen 6. To Speak of Immemorial Waters: Irigaray with Nietzsche Rebecca Hill 7. ""A Morphe in Continual Gestation"": The Sensible Transcendental, Gesture, and Morphology in Irigaray Athena V. Colman Part Three: Feminine Genealogies 8. Simone de Beauvoir and Luce Irigaray: A Genealogy Reconsidered Gail Schwab 9. Luce Irigaray and the Fate of Antigone: Respect for Sexuate Identity Marguerite La Caze 10. Intertwinements of Pictorial Research and Speculative Effort: The Noetic Dance Between Barbara and Luce Francesca Brezzi, translated by Edoardo Bellando and Tamara Lee Part Four: Sexuate Art in the Making 11. Painterly Poetics and Difference in the Making Jacqueline Taylor 12. Irigaray and the Baroque: Exploring Sexual Difference Through Creative Practice Danielle Hamilton 13. The Icon and the Absent Other Rebekah Pryor Contributors Index

Louise Burchill is an independent scholar and a former Honorary Fellow at the Faculty of Fine Arts and Music, University of Melbourne. Rebecca Hill is Senior Lecturer in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT University. She is the author of The Interval: Relation and Becoming in Irigaray, Aristotle, and Bergson and coeditor, with Ryan S. Gustafsson and Helen Ngo, of Philosophies of Difference: Nature, Racism and Sexuate Difference. James Sares is Lecturer in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Kentucky. He is coeditor, with Mary C. Rawlinson, of What Is Sexual Difference? Thinking with Irigaray.

Reviews for Topologies of Sexual Difference: Space in Philosophy and Visual Art After Irigaray

""Topologies of Sexual Difference is certain to make a major contribution to scholarship on Irigaray and continental feminist theory more generally. The essays helpfully elucidate Irigaray's most important spatial concepts—interval, threshold, sensible transcendental, between-us, chôra. Drawing from the full range of Irigaray's works, the volume demonstrates the immense significance of her spatial thinking not only to all branches of philosophy (ontology, epistemology, and ethics) but also to politics, the physical and life sciences, and art. After this volume, no reader could be left wondering about Irigaray's relevance as a thinker of space."" — Yvette Russell, Professor of Law and Feminist Theory, University of Bristol


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