Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 278
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-0-8476-9268-2 • Hardback • September 1999 • $167.00 • (£129.00)
978-0-8476-9269-9 • Paperback • October 1999 • $48.00 • (£37.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-7425-7152-5 • eBook • September 1999 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Drucilla Cornell is professor of women's studies, political science, and law at Rutgers University. Her most recent book is At the Heart of Freedom: Feminism, Sex and Equality.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Acknowledgmets
Chapter 3 Introduction to the New Edition: Feminist Hope
Chapter 4 Introduction: Writing the Manifesta: The Dilemma Of Postmodern Feminism
Chapter 5 1. The Maternal and the Feminine: Social Reality, Fantasy, and Ethical Relation
Chapter 6 2. The Feminist Alliance with Deconstruction
Chapter 7 3. Feminism Always Modified: The Affimation of Feminine Difference Rethought
Chapter 8 4. Feminine Writing, Metaphor, and Myth
Chapter 9 Conclusion: Happy Days
Chapter 10 Notes
Chapter 11 Index
Drucilla Cornell's ambitious and provocative book reworks in radical ways the very boundaries of feminism, legal theory, and recent continental philosophy. Cornell moves deftly and with unsettling conceptual sophistication from a critique of some feminist legal scholarship, the phallocentrism of philosophy and law, to a call for a utopian recognition of difference.
— Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Comparative Literature and Critical Theory, University of California, Berkeley
Drucilla Cornell is the most intellectually sophisticated legal academic writing on these issues today. The philosophical rigor she brings to any question along with the strong imagining of human needs and aspirations makes her contribution to current debates unique and valuable.
— Stanley Fish, University of Illinois at Chicago
Cornell's work not only reflects incredible philosophical and theoretical breadth, but it is motivated by a powerful concrete and practical vision. Beyond Accommodation is written out of the conviction. . .that women will never be able to attain full equality in western societies until they can be regarded in the public eye as full legal subjects, bearing an authority equal to male citizens.
— Patricia Huntington, Loyola University of Chicago
Drucilla Cornell shows that rewriting the feminine is part of undoing the material conditions of suffering rather than a luxurious alternative to understanding those conditions. Her book is both a brilliant appropriation of psychoanalysis and perhaps the most intelligent critique of it in feminist theory today. . . . Indispensable for legal and political theory and for those who like an arguement rather than imaginary gestures towards one.
— Teresa Brennan, Florida Atlantic University, University of Amsterdam