We Are Not Born Submissive: How Patriarchy Shapes Women's Lives = On ne naît pas soumise, on le devient

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A philosophical exploration of female submission, using insights from feminist thinkers—especially Simone de Beauvoir—to reveal the complexities of women’s reality and lived experience What role do women play in the perpetuation of patriarchy? On the one hand, popular media urges women to be independent, outspoken, and career-minded. Yet, this same media glorifies a specific, sometimes voluntary, female submissiveness as a source of satisfaction. In philosophy, even less has been said on why women submit to men and the discussion has been equally contradictory—submission has traditionally been considered a vice or pathology, but female submission has been valorized as innate to women’s nature. Is there a way to explore female submission in all of its complexity—not denying its appeal in certain instances, and not buying into an antifeminist, sexist, or misogynistic perspective? We Are Not Born Submissive offers the first in-depth philosophical exploration of female submission, focusing on the thinking of Simone de Beauvoir, and more recent work in feminist philosophy, epistemology, and political theory. Manon Garcia argues that to comprehend female submission, we must invert how we examine power, taking a bottom-up approach and seeing it from the woman’s point of view. Historically, philosophers, psychoanalysts, and even some radical feminists have conflated femininity and submission. Garcia demonstrates that only through the lens of women’s lived experiences—their economic, social, and political situations—and how women adapt their preferences to maintain their own well-being, can we understand the ways in which gender hierarchies in society shape women’s experiences. Ultimately, she asserts that women do not actively choose submission. Rather, they consent to—and sometimes take pleasure in—what is prescribed to them through social norms within a patriarchy. Moving beyond the simplistic binary of natural destiny or moral vice, We Are Not Born Submissive takes a sophisticated look at how female submissiveness can be explained.

Author(s): Manon Garcia
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 248
City: Princeton

Copyright
CONTENTS
Preface
1 Submission: A Philosophical Taboo
Female Submission and Feminism
Submission from Women’s Point of View
A Matter of Perspective
Which Women?
Domination and Submission
With Beauvoir
2 Is Submission Feminine? Is Femininity a Submission?
Are Women Masochistic?
Submission: A Feminine Virtue?
To Be a Woman Is to Submit
3 Womanhood as a Situation
Sexual Difference Is Not a Matter of Essences
Femininity as Social Construction?
Situation and Sexual Difference
Femininity, Situation, and Destiny
4 Elusive Submission
Submission and Ordinary Life
An Analysis of Power from the Bottom Up
The History of an Inversion
What Can We Know about Submission?
Can the Subaltern Speak?
5 The Experience of Submission
A Privileged Position
An Original Phenomenological Method
Phenomenology and the Silence of the Oppressed
The Experience of All Women?
6 Submission Is an Alienation
Oppression as Alienation
The Woman-Object
7 The Objectified Body of the Submissive Woman
Woman Cannot Abstract Herself from Her Body
The Biological Body Is Social
A Lived Body That Can Be Objectified: What Men and Women Have in Common
The Alienation of Women: The Objectified Lived Body
From the Body- Object to the Passive Prey
8 Delights or Oppression: The Ambiguity of Submission
Beauty
Love-Abdication
The Power of Submission
9 Freedom and Submission
An Ethics of Freedom
Why Women Submit to Men
Toward Emancipation
Conclusion: What Now?
NOTES
Preface
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Conclusion
INDEX