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Diana Fuss [9]Diana Jean Fuss [1]Diana J. Fuss [1]
  1. Essentially speaking: feminism, nature & difference.Diana Fuss - 1989 - New York: Routledge.
    In this brief and powerful book, Diana Fuss takes on the debate of pure essence versus social construct, engaging with the work of Luce Irigaray and Monique ...
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  2. Essentially Speaking: Feminism, Nature, and Difference.Diana Fuss & Elizabeth Grosz - 1991 - Hypatia 6 (3):208-217.
    A critical analysis of Diana Fuss's Essentially Speaking: Feminism, Nature, and Difference and Elizabeth Grosz's Sexual Subversions: Three French Feminists.
     
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  3. “Essentially Speaking”: Luce Irigaray's Language of Essence.Diana J. Fuss - 1988 - Hypatia 3 (3):62-80.
    Luce Irigaray's fearlessness towards speaking the body has earned for her work the dismissive label “essentialist.” But Irigaray's Speculum de l'autre femme and Ce Sexe qui n'en est pas un suggest that essence may not be the unitary, monolithic, in short, essentialist category that anti-essentialists so often presume it to be. Irigaray strategically deploys essentialism for at least two reasons: first, to reverse and to displace Jacques Lacan's phallomorphism; and second, to expose the contradiction at the heart of Aristotelian metaphysics (...)
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  4. Interior Colonies: Frantz Fanon and the Politics of Identification.Diana Fuss - 1994 - Diacritics 24 (2/3):19.
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    Human, all too human.Diana Fuss (ed.) - 1996 - New York: Routledge.
    The question of what it means to be human has never before been more difficult and more contested. The human, with a complicated social history that his rarely been examined, remains entrenched in traditional Enlightenment thinking. Human, All Too Human considers how we might radicalize our notion of the human. Can the human be thought outside humanism? Any rethinking of the human places us immediately inside an ever-widening field of contrasting labels: animate and inanimate, natural and artificial, living and dead, (...)
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  6. Fashion and the Homospectatorial Look.Diana Fuss - 1992 - Critical Inquiry 18 (4):713-737.
  7. Corpse Poem.Diana Fuss, Dennis Kezar, Benjamin Robinson, Michael Taussig, Oren Izenberg, Susan Lanzoni, Peter Havholm, Philip Sandifer & Jerome Christensen - 2003 - Critical Inquiry 30 (1):1.
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    Look Who's Talking, or If Looks Could Kill.Diana Fuss - 1996 - Critical Inquiry 22 (2):383-392.
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  9.  15
    Reconstructing EssentialismEssentially Speaking: Feminism, Nature, and Difference. [REVIEW]Deborah G. Chay & Diana Fuss - 1991 - Diacritics 21 (2/3):135.
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