Man and Woman in Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit"
Dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook (
1997)
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Abstract
I demonstrate that the distinction between sex and gender is essential to Hegel's analysis of male and female roles in society through his recourse to the categories of nature and spirit. I then argue that the structure of self-consciousness in the Phenomenology is implicitly and necessarily male on Hegel's own terms for systematic reasons. Further, I maintain that Hegel's model of mutual recognition is patterned on fraternity, and thus excludes women from a wider political community. Finally, I contend that Hegel's problematic formulation of the sex/gender distinction can nonetheless be critically appropriated by contemporary social and political philosophy