
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1995
Pages: 431-444
Series: Phaenomenologica
ISBN (Undefined): 9780792335672
Full citation:
, "Myth, ritual, desire, and gender", in: From phenomenology to thought, errancy, and desire, Berlin, Springer, 1995


Myth, ritual, desire, and gender
pp. 431-444
in: Babette Babich (ed), From phenomenology to thought, errancy, and desire, Berlin, Springer, 1995Abstract
The fundamental response to being born into the world, according to Descartes echoing Aristotle in his Treatise on Passions, is that of wonder. This is an observation psychoanalysts, in the effort to clarify the manifold connections between early experience and later events, can easily overlook. The object of wonder neither repels nor attracts. It incites neither flight nor approach. Wonder to the second power — wonder that carries one to a simultaneous apprehension of the object of wonder and the subject in wonder — is awe.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1995
Pages: 431-444
Series: Phaenomenologica
ISBN (Undefined): 9780792335672
Full citation:
, "Myth, ritual, desire, and gender", in: From phenomenology to thought, errancy, and desire, Berlin, Springer, 1995