Banner with links HomeP S U dot E D U home

Menu:




To permission or license the content in this book
get permission to use this content
Book cover image

Feminist Interpretations of Søren Kierkegaard

By Celine Leon

376 pages | 6 x 9 | 1997

Cloth edition is not available

ISBN 978-0-271-01699-3 | paper: $26.00 sh

Re-Reading the Canon Series


Shopping Cart



Unlike many of the major figures in Western philosophy, Kierkegaard expores many issues of interest to feminist theorists today. Moreover, he does so in a style — labyrinthine, many-voiced, multilayered, adverse to authority — that adumbrates écriture féminine.

A major question probed in the volume is whether Kierkegaard's writings are misogynist, ambivalent, or essentialist in their views of women and the feminine or whether, in some important and vital ways, they are liberatory and empowering for feminists and women tring to free themselves from the maze of patriarchal constructs.

The essays also show how the three existence-spheres — aesthetic, ethical, and religious — articulated in Kierkegaard's authorship inscribe different modalities of teh sexual relation: seduction for the aesthetic, marriage for the ethical, and absence from commerce with the other sex for the religious.

Contributors are Sylviane Agacinski, Wanda Warren Berry, Birgit Bertung, Jane Duran, Leslie A. Howe, Céline Léon, Tamsin Lorraine, Robert L. Perkins, Mark L. Taylor, Sylvia Walsh, and Julia Watkin.


Céline Léon is Professor of French and Humanities at Grove City College. Her publications include articles on Simone de Beauvoir and contemporary French feminism.

Sylvia Walsh, who has taught at Clark Atlanta University and Stetson University, is the author of Living Poetically: Kierkegaard’s Existential Aesthetics (Penn State, 1994).