<p><b>A feminist reading of how Heidegger may have responded to an unanswered questioned he posed in 1923 Problem: What is woman? while using his thought to better understand how contemporary society replies to questions in the realms of law bioethics pedagogy and politics.</b></p><p>This book begins with an unexplored and unanswered question that Martin Heidegger raises in a 1923 Freiburg course: Problem: What is woman? Yet why should we care that Heidegger raises this problem? What could he a member of the National Socialist Party help feminists understand about responding to the woman question? How can Heidegger help us understand our own historical climate in which this question continues to hold significance? Jill Drouillard divides Heidegger's thought into two categories to think about the sexed/gendered experiences that coordinate our birth: (1) the one that suspends the woman question and that provides useful resources for thinking the fluidity of sex/gender and (2) the one that provides a totalized reply to this query by manipulating tropes of the feminine to advance a politico-poetic project of Nazi politics. She uses Heidegger as a cautionary tale to demonstrate the harm that occurs when society tries to define the being (or what is) of woman in any definite sense. In some chapters she teases apart how Heidegger may have offered a reply to the woman question and in others shows what happens in today's society when law bioethics politics and pedagogy reckon with this query.</p>
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