Feminist Interpretations of Hans-Georg GadamerLorraine Code |
Contents
Why Feminists Do Not Read Gadamer | 1 |
Hermeneutics and Constructed Identities | 57 |
Gadamers Philosophical Hermeneutics | 81 |
Does the Other Have a Say? | 109 |
The Development of Hermeneutic Prospects | 133 |
Postmodern Hermeneutics? Toward a Critical | 149 |
Gadamer and Feminism | 181 |
Toward a Critical Hermeneutics | 203 |
Feminist Issues Enlisting Gadamerian Resources | 229 |
The Hermeneutic Conversation as Epistemological Model | 259 |
Gadamer Heidegger and | 285 |
Questioning Authority | 307 |
Gender Nazism and Hermeneutics | 325 |
Contributors | 389 |
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Common terms and phrases
According to Gadamer Alcoff Arendt assumptions authority Benhabib Butler Cambridge canon claim coherence consciousness constitutive constructed context conversation critical hermeneutics critique cultural Dallmayr Dasein debate Derrida develop dialectical Dialogue and Deconstruction discourse discussion dition domination Donna Haraway Ellison epistemic ethical experience feminine feminism Feminist Epistemologies Feminist Interpretations feminist theory fusion of horizons Gadamer's account Gadamer's hermeneutics Gadamerian hermeneutics gender identity Habermas Hans-Georg Gadamer Haraway Heidegger hermeneutic circle historical human ical idea inquiry inter issues Judith Butler knowledge language linguistic logic Martin Heidegger meaning Michelfelder moral nature normative object one's ontology oppressive particular philosophical hermeneutics phronesis Plato political position possible postmodern practice prejudices preter problem question reading recognition recognize relation Routledge Schott sense simply situatedness situation social social constructivism speak thinking tion tradition Trans Truth and Method understanding University Press validity Warnke Western women York Press
References to this book
Hermeneutics and Hindu Thought: Toward a Fusion of Horizons Rita Sherma,Arvind Sharma Limited preview - 2008 |