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However conflict arose within feminism over the issue. Some French feminists, seeing phallocentrism and feminism as two sides of the same coin, sought to make a postphallicist breakthrough. Others, like the
English feminist
110:, extending the focus of protest from Lacan to Freud, psychoanalysis, and male-centered thinking as a whole: the way that "he phallus, centre of meaning, became man's identity with himself... a masculine symbolic".
118:, while accepting that "Lacan was implicated in the phallocentrism he described," nevertheless considered his analysis as important for an understanding of how women were constituted as a split subject in society.
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organ, is the central element in the organization of the social world. Phallocentrism has been analyzed in literary criticism, psychoanalysis and psychology, linguistics, medicine and health care, and philosophy.
100:, an imaginary object, or a physical organ, but rather "the signifier intended to designate as a whole the effects of the signified... this signifying function of the phallus".
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perspective, however, such theoretical debates revealed the irrelevance of first world feminists, with their phallocentric preoccupations, to the ordinary life of the
77:. Freud, however, remained unmoved in his opposition to the Horney/Jones thesis, and his was the predominant psychoanalytic position thereafter, though some like
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in childhood development, when he argued that "men analysts have been led to adopt an unduly phallo-centric view". Drawing on the earlier arguments of
142:, has also broadly seen the theoreticism and essentialism of feminism's earlier concern for phallocentrism as irrelevant to daily female experience.
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added a linguistic turn to the debate with his article "The
Signification of the Phallus" (1958/65), arguing that the phallus was not a
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suggests that feminism needs to negotiate with phallocentrism, and phallocentrism must negotiate with feminism.
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would modify his position to the effect that "Freud's concept, of course, is... a
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challenged his thesis as phallocentric, and the charge was taken up by
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The
Columbia Dictionary of Modern Literary and Cultural Criticism
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85:of phallocentrism, not a recommendation of it".
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27:Idea that the world centers on the phallus
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377:Kathy Acker and Transnationalism
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216:Quoted in K. K. Reithven,
218:Feminist Literary Studies
33:is the ideology that the
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439:Feminism and sexuality
61:over the role of the
444:Feminist terminology
187:Phallic architecture
108:second-wave feminism
464:Postmodern feminism
136:third-wave feminism
364:Feminine Sexuality
167:Feminist geography
75:castration anxiety
390:Third Wave Agenda
325:Sequel to History
309:Sequel to History
281:J. Childers ed.,
246:(PFL 7) p. 391-2
162:Ecriture feminine
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122:Third phase
98:part-object
83:description
49:First phase
428:Categories
336:E. Amour,
321:Andrea Nye
268:J. Lacan,
242:S. Freud,
204:References
71:penis envy
182:Male gaze
132:subaltern
459:Misogyny
294:P. Gay,
229:P. Gay,
150:See also
126:From a
35:phallus
270:Ecrits
42:sexual
296:Freud
231:Freud
59:Freud
37:, or
39:male
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20:)
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