Hélène Cixous is perhaps best known for her paper, ‘The Laugh of the Medusa’ (1976) and her literary contributions outside academia. In this paper, we pick up a lesser known Cixous text, ‘Le Sexe ou la tête?’ that offers an interesting and provocative perspective on the traps associated with being feminine in a masculine environment. As we converse with Cixous, weaving our own words and experiences with hers, we link her work more closely with the feminine in modern-day academia. We suggest that Cixous’s remarks on decapitation and voice offer a way forward for academic women to be; to speak; to recognise the double jeopardy of decapitation in the university; and to use laughter as a strategic, powerful, political act of resistance and subv...
This paper charts some of the taboos and prejudices surrounding the female voice and asks why it is ...
H. Cixous does not identify “Woman” with biological sex, not even with one gender, but with the “cap...
The phallogocentric stucture of language privileges the male in construction of meaning throughout t...
Hélène Cixous is perhaps best known for her paper, ‘The Laugh of the Medusa’ (1976) and her literary...
This presentation was made during the session "Creating a Space for the Female Body."Abstract of a p...
Bending Gen(re)der: The Negotiation of Identity through Language in Hélène Cixous and the Self analy...
My dissertation focuses on language and forms of expression for women in early modern English litera...
This paper aims to explore Helen Cixous’ postmodernist trends in her formulations of a new form of w...
Feminist philosopher Hélène Cixous uses Medusa as a metaphor for the powerful female voice that can ...
Metaphors enable us to understand organisations in distinctive ways and explain the paucity of women...
This thesis discusses Hélène Cixous’ ideas on feminine literature, as expressed in her article, “The...
It would be a serious oversight to begin an issue of a French e-journal (albeit in English studies) ...
Este artículo analiza la noción de écriture féminine de Hélène Cixous en relación con sus textos: «...
This paper discusses the synthesised findings from two interdisciplinary, feminist studies conducted...
How does language structure patriarchy? How are gendered language and creation story imagery evidenc...
This paper charts some of the taboos and prejudices surrounding the female voice and asks why it is ...
H. Cixous does not identify “Woman” with biological sex, not even with one gender, but with the “cap...
The phallogocentric stucture of language privileges the male in construction of meaning throughout t...
Hélène Cixous is perhaps best known for her paper, ‘The Laugh of the Medusa’ (1976) and her literary...
This presentation was made during the session "Creating a Space for the Female Body."Abstract of a p...
Bending Gen(re)der: The Negotiation of Identity through Language in Hélène Cixous and the Self analy...
My dissertation focuses on language and forms of expression for women in early modern English litera...
This paper aims to explore Helen Cixous’ postmodernist trends in her formulations of a new form of w...
Feminist philosopher Hélène Cixous uses Medusa as a metaphor for the powerful female voice that can ...
Metaphors enable us to understand organisations in distinctive ways and explain the paucity of women...
This thesis discusses Hélène Cixous’ ideas on feminine literature, as expressed in her article, “The...
It would be a serious oversight to begin an issue of a French e-journal (albeit in English studies) ...
Este artículo analiza la noción de écriture féminine de Hélène Cixous en relación con sus textos: «...
This paper discusses the synthesised findings from two interdisciplinary, feminist studies conducted...
How does language structure patriarchy? How are gendered language and creation story imagery evidenc...
This paper charts some of the taboos and prejudices surrounding the female voice and asks why it is ...
H. Cixous does not identify “Woman” with biological sex, not even with one gender, but with the “cap...
The phallogocentric stucture of language privileges the male in construction of meaning throughout t...