Time Travels: Feminism, nature, power

Front Cover
Allen & Unwin, Jul 1, 2005 - Social Science - 272 pages
In Time Travels distinguished feminist theorist Elizabeth Grosz turns her attention to a topic long hinted at in feminist politics, but rarely elaborated: the question of time and how it relates to power and subjectivity.

Grosz draws out the implications of considering time as a positive natural force that orients and directs cultural, social and political life. She shows how this can transform our understanding of biology and nature, politics and power relations, and sexual and gender relations.

In rethinking time, Grosz examines texts and positions that are usually considered outside the scope of feminism: Darwin's evolutionary theory, the writings of Nietzsche on the question of force, conceptions of violence as they are embodied in law, Bergson's understanding of duration, and Deleuze's notion of becoming. She also explores the radical implications of reconceptualising temporality for work on race, sexual difference, identity, pleasure and desire.

Together, the essays in Time Travels demonstrate the breadth and applicability of Grosz's thinking about time as an under-theorised but uniquely productive force.

'What does it mean to introduce time into thought? Bergson formulated this question in the nineteenth century; Deleuze took it up again in postwar France. In her philosophical travels through legal studies, new technologies, and debates in Darwinism, Elizabeth Grosz brilliantly pursues its punch for us today.' - John Rajchman, author of The Deleuze Connections

About the author (2005)

Elizabeth Grosz has taught at the University of Sydney, Monash University and SUNY Buffalo, and is currently Professor of Women's and Gender Studies at Rutgers University. She is the author and editor of many influential books including Volatile Bodies, Sexual Subversions and most recently, Nick of Time: Politics, evolution and the untimely.

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