Anonymity and Feminist Identity
Simone de Beauvoir’s Agon and Ours
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:30th Jun '26
£105.00
This title is due to be published on 30th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Anonymity is a condition that both intrigues and terrifies us. Such emotions reflect historical inequities of power as well as the limits of human cognition and imagination. How do they affect women’s relationships at the emotional, philosophical, and political level? How might they inflect women’s responses to bullying, economic and academic competition, and even philosophical teaching and writing? Laura Hengehold uses Simone de Beauvoir’s novels and philosophical texts to provide insights into women’s hopes and fears regarding anonymity, while also acknowledging their desire to be recognized in a definitive sense as these particular human beings. In an age of rapidly changing identification technologies, Beauvoir’s works turn our attention to women’s ongoing struggles to individuate from one another and from men, in defiance of the presuppositions that resources and attention are scarce goods.
The valorization of anonymity is both unexpected and convincing, even in an age of anxiety over mass surveillance and digital masking of identity. The way in which the text opens up a multiplicity of ways of thinking anonymity in a feminist context, drawing on philosophers from Leibniz to Husserl to Bergson to Fanon, and literary figures from Morrison to Atwood to Beauvoir’s own novels, displays the stunning range of Hengehold’s investigation. Anonymity is analyzed with respect to the (Hegelian) fight for distinctness and recognition, considering both its dangers and the opportunities it affords for women and other marginalized groups. -- Elaine P. Miller, Miami University
There is so much confusion in current scholarship about questions of identity and the extent to which they should be mobilized for political action. This very much needed book shows how de Beauvoir's philosophy can illuminate the tension between individuality and collective action. The result is a compelling account of how identity can remain open, relational and contested, while still supporting feminist solidarity and collective struggles. -- Chiara Bottici, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
In this rich and thought-provoking intervention, Laura Hengehold brilliantly brings Beauvoir’s life and philosophy into dialogue with other thinkers to illuminate the problem of anonymity and individuation. Particularly attentive to historical contexts and to women’s positions within the university, the study invites necessary reflection on feminist research ethics: a much needed challenge to the competitive individualism of neoliberal academia. -- Marine Rouch, University Toulouse - Jean Jaurès
ISBN: 9781399545464
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
392 pages