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Tracing the Feminist Maternal in a European Context: A Review

Review products

Gill Rye, Victoria Browne, Adalgisa Giorgio, Emily Jeremiah, and Abigail Lee Six (eds.), Motherhood in Literature and Culture: Interdisciplinary Perspectives from Europe, New York, Routledge, 2017.

Luisa Muraro, The Symbolic Order of the Mother. 1991. Trans. Francesca Novello. Timothy Murphy (ed.), Albany, New York: SUNY Press, 2018.

Cesare Casarino and Andrea Righi (eds.), Another Mother: Diotima and the Symbolic Order of Italian Feminism. Trans. Mark William Epstein, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2018.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 May 2024

Tatjana Takševa*
Affiliation:
St Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

Extract

“What might motherhood and Europe have to do with one another?” is a question posed by Lisa Baraitser in the Foreword to the collection, Motherhood in Literature and Culture: Interdisciplinary Perspectives from Europe. The question is certainly pertinent at a time when the very concept of Europe as a geopolitical space and an imaginary construct is being interrogated and critiqued from both within and without the carefully policed borders of the European Union project. It is also pertinent given the increased amount of scholarship on the maternal produced by scholars occupying various transnational locations and positionalities, working to deconstruct unitary and essentialist ideas about mothers and motherhood. The possibility of identifying a specifically European maternal theoretical and lived space thus invites us to carefully theorize the diversity of European contexts, a diversity that is often occluded or elided by easy references to Eurocentric bias in feminist research, as well as the dis/continuities between European-based and Anglo-American feminist scholarship on the maternal. And yet, precisely because the work of mothering always unfolds within specific micro and macro geographic, social, cultural, and ideological spaces, the question merits closer attention. In this essay I consider the cluster of three books delineating the contours of an Italian, as well as a more broadly conceptualized European, philosophy of the maternal in light of these evolving academic and experiential realities.

Type
Invited Review Essay
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Hypatia, a Nonprofit Corporation

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