Luce Irigaray (; born 3 May 1930) is a
Belgian-born
French feminist, philosopher,
linguist
Linguistics is the scientific study of language. The areas of linguistic analysis are syntax (rules governing the structure of sentences), semantics (meaning), Morphology (linguistics), morphology (structure of words), phonetics (speech sounds ...
,
psycholinguist,
psychoanalyst
PsychoanalysisFrom Greek: and is a set of theories and techniques of research to discover unconscious processes and their influence on conscious thought, emotion and behaviour. Based on dream interpretation, psychoanalysis is also a talk th ...
, and
cultural theorist who examines the uses and misuses of language in relation to women.
Irigaray's first and most well known book, published in 1974, was ''Speculum of the Other Woman'' (1974), which analyzes the texts of
Freud,
Hegel,
Plato
Plato ( ; Greek language, Greek: , ; born BC, died 348/347 BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher of the Classical Greece, Classical period who is considered a foundational thinker in Western philosophy and an innovator of the writte ...
,
Aristotle
Aristotle (; 384–322 BC) was an Ancient Greek philosophy, Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath. His writings cover a broad range of subjects spanning the natural sciences, philosophy, linguistics, economics, politics, psychology, a ...
,
Descartes, and
Kant through the lens of
phallocentrism. Irigaray is the author of works analyzing many thinkers, including ''This Sex Which Is Not One'' (1977), which discusses
Lacan's work as well as political economy; ''Elemental Passions'' (1982) can be read as a response to
Merleau‐Ponty's article “The Intertwining—The Chiasm” in ''The Visible and the Invisible'',
and in ''The Forgetting of Air in Martin Heidegger'' (1999), Irigaray critiques
Heidegger's emphasis on the element of earth as the ground of life and speech and his "oblivion" or forgetting of air.
Irigaray employs three different modes in her investigations into the nature of gender, language, and
identity: the analytic, the essayistic, and the
lyrical poetic. As of October 2021, she is active in the Women's Movements in both
France
France, officially the French Republic, is a country located primarily in Western Europe. Overseas France, Its overseas regions and territories include French Guiana in South America, Saint Pierre and Miquelon in the Atlantic Ocean#North Atlan ...
and
Italy
Italy, officially the Italian Republic, is a country in Southern Europe, Southern and Western Europe, Western Europe. It consists of Italian Peninsula, a peninsula that extends into the Mediterranean Sea, with the Alps on its northern land b ...
.
Education
Luce Irigaray received a bachelor's degree from the
University of Louvain in 1954, a master's degree from the same university in 1956, and taught at a high school in Brussels from 1956 to 1959.
In 1960, she moved to
Paris
Paris () is the Capital city, capital and List of communes in France with over 20,000 inhabitants, largest city of France. With an estimated population of 2,048,472 residents in January 2025 in an area of more than , Paris is the List of ci ...
to pursue a master's degree in Psychology from the
University of Paris
The University of Paris (), known Metonymy, metonymically as the Sorbonne (), was the leading university in Paris, France, from 1150 to 1970, except for 1793–1806 during the French Revolution. Emerging around 1150 as a corporation associated wit ...
, which she earned in 1961. She also received a
specialist diploma in Psychopathology from the school in 1962. In 1968, she received a doctorate in Linguistics from
Paris X Nanterre. Her thesis was titled .
She completed a PhD in linguistics in 1968 from the
University of Vincennes in Saint-Denis (University of Paris VIII). Her dissertation on speech patterns of subjects suffering from dementia became her first book, , published in 1973. In 1974, she earned a second PhD in Philosophy.
In the 1960s, Irigaray started attending the psychoanalytic seminars of Jacques Lacan and joined the
École Freudienne de Paris (Freudian School of Paris), directed by Lacan. She was expelled from this school in 1974, after the publication of her second doctoral thesis (
doctorat d'État), ''Speculum of the Other Woman'' (, later retitled as ), which received much criticism from both the Lacanian and Freudian schools of psychoanalysis. This criticism brought her recognition, but she was removed from her position as an instructor at the University of Vincennes as well as ostracized from the Lacanian community.
She held a research post at the
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
The French National Centre for Scientific Research (, , CNRS) is the French state research organisation and is the largest fundamental science agency in Europe.
In 2016, it employed 31,637 staff, including 11,137 tenured researchers, 13,415 eng ...
since 1964, where she is now a Director of Research in Philosophy. Her initial research focused on dementia patients, about whom she produced a study of the differences between the language of male and female patients.
It has also been noted that in her writings, Irigaray has stated a concern that an interest in her biography would affect the interpretation of her ideas, as the entrance of women into intellectual discussions has often also included the challenging of women's point of view based on biographical material. Her most extensive autobiographical statements thus far are gathered in ''Through Vegetal Being'' (co-authored with
Michael Marder). Overall, she maintains the belief that biographical details pertaining to her personal life hold the possibility to be used against her within the male dominated educational establishment as a tool to discredit her work.
However, at age 91, she published ''A New Culture of Energy: Beyond East and West'' (2021) in which she discusses her decades-long practices of yoga asanas (postures) and pranayama (breathing) and maintains that yoga builds a bridge between body and spirit.
Major works
''Speculum of the Other Woman (Speculum de l'autre femme)''
Her first major book, ''Speculum of the Other Woman,'' based on her second dissertation, was published in 1974. In ''Speculum,'' Irigaray engages in close analyses of phallocentrism in Western philosophy and psychoanalytic theory, analyzing texts by Freud, Hegel, Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, and Kant. The book's most cited essay, "The Blind Spot of an Old Dream," critiques Freud's lecture on femininity.
''This Sex Which is Not One'' (''Ce sexe qui n'en est pas un'')
In 1977, Irigaray published ''This Sex Which is Not One'' () which was subsequently translated into English with that title and published in 1985, along with ''Speculum''. In addition to more commentary on psychoanalysis, including discussions of Lacan's work, ''This Sex Which is Not One'' also comments on political economy, drawing on structuralist writers such as
Lévi-Strauss. For example, Irigaray argues that the phallic economy places women alongside signs and currency, since all forms of exchange are conducted exclusively between men.
"Women on the Market"
in "Women on the Market" (Chapter Eight of ''This Sex Which is Not One)'', Irigaray draws upon
Karl Marx
Karl Marx (; 5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883) was a German philosopher, political theorist, economist, journalist, and revolutionary socialist. He is best-known for the 1848 pamphlet '' The Communist Manifesto'' (written with Friedrich Engels) ...
's
theory of capital and commodities to claim that women are exchanged between men in the same way as any other commodity is. She argues that our entire society is predicated on this exchange of women. Her exchange value is determined by society, while her use value is her natural qualities. Thus, a woman’s self is divided between her use and exchange values, and she is only desired for the exchange value. This system creates three types of women: the mother, who is all use value; the virgin, who is all exchange value; and the prostitute, who embodies both use and exchange value.
She further uses additional Marxist foundations to argue that women are in demand due to their perceived shortage and as a result, males seek "to have them all," or seek a surplus like the excess of commodity buying power, capital, that capitalists seek constantly. Irigaray speculates thus that perhaps, "the way women are used matters less than their number." In this further analogy of women "on the market," understood through Marxist terms, Irigaray points out that women, like commodities, are moved between men based on their exchange value rather than just their use value, and the desire will always be surplus – making women almost seem like capital, in this case, to be accumulated. "As commodities, women are thus two things at once: utilitarian objects and bearers of value."
''Elemental Passions''
Luce Irigaray's ''Elemental Passions'' (1982) could be read as a response to
Merleau‐Ponty's article “The Intertwining—The Chiasm” in ''The Visible and the Invisible''. Like Merleau‐Ponty, Irigaray describes corporeal intertwining or vision and touch. Counteracting the narcissistic strain in Merleau‐Ponty's chiasm, she assumes that sexual difference must precede the intertwining. The subject is marked by the
alterity or the “more than one” and encoded as a historically contingent gendered conflict.
Themes
Philosophy
Some of Irigaray's books written in her lyrical mode are imaginary dialogues with significant contributors to Western philosophy, such as
Nietzsche and
Heidegger. However, Irigaray also writes a significant body of work on
Hegel,
Descartes,
Plato
Plato ( ; Greek language, Greek: , ; born BC, died 348/347 BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher of the Classical Greece, Classical period who is considered a foundational thinker in Western philosophy and an innovator of the writte ...
,
Aristotle
Aristotle (; 384–322 BC) was an Ancient Greek philosophy, Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath. His writings cover a broad range of subjects spanning the natural sciences, philosophy, linguistics, economics, politics, psychology, a ...
and
Levinas,
Spinoza, as well as
Merleau-Ponty. Her academic work is largely influenced by a wide range of philosophers and cannot be limited to one approach.
Language
She continued to conduct empirical studies about language in a variety of settings, researching the differences between the way men and women speak. This focus on sexual difference is the key characteristic of Irigaray's oeuvre, since she is seeking to provide a site from which a feminine language can eventuate. Through her research, Irigaray discovered a correlation between the suppression of female thought in the Western world and language of men and women. She concluded that there are gendered language patterns that denote dominance in men and subjectivity in women.
Sexual difference
Building on but departing from Lacan, Irigaray asserts that the phallus has functioned as the central signifier of meaning and subjectivity, leaving no space for women to exist as autonomous subjects.
To counter this, she proposes the creation of a new
symbolic order that acknowledges and values genuine sexual difference, allowing women to develop their own forms of speech, desire, and representation. Her vision is not for gender neutrality but for a world in which male and female exist as two equally recognized yet distinct identities.
Gender identity
Since 1990, Irigaray's work has turned increasingly toward women and men together. In ''Between East and West, From Singularity to Community'' (1999) and in ''The Way of Love'' (2002), she imagines new forms of love for a global democratic community. In ''An Ethics of Sexual Difference'', she introduces the idea of relationships between men and women centered around a bond other than reproduction. She acknowledges themes including finiteness and
intersubjectivity, embodied divinity, and the emotional distinction between the two sexes. She concludes that Western culture is unethical due to gender discrimination.
Politics
Irigaray is active in a feminist movement in Italy, but she refused to belong to any one movement because she does not like the competitive dynamic between the feminist movements.
Criticism
Some feminists criticize Irigaray's perceived
essentialist positions. However, there is much debate among scholars as to whether or not Irigaray's theory of sexual difference is, indeed, an essentialist one. The perception that her work is essentialist concentrates on her attention to sexual difference, taking this to constitute a rehearsal of heteronormative sexuality. As Helen Fielding states, the uneasiness among feminists about Irigaray's discussion of masculinity and femininity does not so much reveal Irigaray's heteronormative bias as much as it "arises out of an inherited cultural understanding
n the part of her criticsthat posits nature as either unchanging organism or as matter that can be ordered, manipulated and inscribed upon. Hence the concern over essentialism is itself grounded in the
binary thinking that preserves a hierarchy of...culture over nature."
W. A. Borody has criticised Irigaray's phallogocentric argument as misrepresenting the history of philosophies of "indeterminateness" in the West. Irigaray's "black and white" claims that the masculine equates to determinateness and that the feminine equates to indeterminateness which a degree of cultural and historical validity, but not when they are deployed to self-replicate a similar form of the gender-othering they originally sought to overcome.
In ''
Fashionable Nonsense'',
Alan Sokal and
Jean Bricmont criticized Irigaray's use of hard-science terminology in her writings. Among the criticisms, they question the purported interest Einstein had in "accelerations without electromagnetic reequilibrations"; confusing
special relativity
In physics, the special theory of relativity, or special relativity for short, is a scientific theory of the relationship between Spacetime, space and time. In Albert Einstein's 1905 paper, Annus Mirabilis papers#Special relativity,
"On the Ele ...
and
general relativity
General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity, and as Einstein's theory of gravity, is the differential geometry, geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of grav ...
; and her claim that is a "sexed equation" because "it privileges the speed of light over other speeds that are vitally necessary to us". In reviewing Sokal and Bricmont's book,
Richard Dawkins
Richard Dawkins (born 26 March 1941) is a British evolutionary biology, evolutionary biologist, zoologist, science communicator and author. He is an Oxford fellow, emeritus fellow of New College, Oxford, and was Simonyi Professor for the Publ ...
wrote that Irigaray's assertion that
fluid mechanics
Fluid mechanics is the branch of physics concerned with the mechanics of fluids (liquids, gases, and plasma (physics), plasmas) and the forces on them.
Originally applied to water (hydromechanics), it found applications in a wide range of discipl ...
was unfairly neglected in physics due to its association with "feminine" fluids (in contrast to "masculine"
solids) was "daffy absurdity."
Selected bibliography
Books
* (Eng. trans. 1985 by
Gillian C. Gill), .
* (Eng. trans. 1985), .
* (Eng. trans. 1991 by Gillian C. Gill), .
* (Eng. trans. 1992), .
* (Eng. trans. 1999), .
* (Eng. trans. 1993 by Gillian C. Gill), .
* (Eng. trans. 2002), .
* (Eng. trans. 1993 by Gillian C. Gill), .
* (Eng. trans. 1993), .
* (Eng. trans. 1993), .
* (Eng. trans. 1993), .
* (Eng. trans. 2000), .
* (Eng. trans. 2001), .
* (Eng. trans. 2001), .
* Irigaray, Luce (2000). Why Different?, .
* .
* (Eng. trans. 2008), .
* Irigaray, Luce (2008). Conversations, .
*
* .
* .
* .
* (Eng. trans. 2021),
Papers
*
*
* Luce Irigaray (1999), "Philosophy in the Feminine", Feminist Review, Volume 42, Issue 1, pp 111–114, ISSN 1466-4380.
*
* Irigaray, Luce (1981), "And the One Doesn't Stir Without the Other", Signs, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 60–67.
*Irigaray, Luce (1980), "When Our Lips Speak Together", Signs, Vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 69–79.
See also
References
Further reading
*
*
* Sjöholm, Cecilia. "Crossing Lovers: Luce Irigaray's Elemental Passions." Hypatia, 2000
*
*
External links
*
mythosandlogos.comcriticallegalthinking.com
{{DEFAULTSORT:Irigaray, Luce
1930 births
20th-century French non-fiction writers
20th-century French philosophers
21st-century French non-fiction writers
21st-century French philosophers
Academics of the University of Nottingham
Catholic University of Leuven (1834–1968) alumni
Academic staff of Paris 8 University Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Critical theorists
Academic staff of Erasmus University Rotterdam
Scholars of feminist philosophy
Feminism and psychoanalysis
Feminist studies scholars
Feminist theorists
French feminists
French psychoanalysts
French women philosophers
21st-century French linguists
French women linguists
Living people
Philosophers of language
Philosophers of mind
Philosophers of psychology
Philosophers of sexuality
Postmodern feminists
University of Paris alumni
Feminist psychologists
20th-century French women writers
20th-century French linguists