This Sex Which Is Not One -
It bridges the gap between psychoanalysis, structuralism, and radical feminism.
The book is a collection of essays that deconstructs the male-dominated history of Western philosophy and psychoanalysis. Irigaray argues that Western culture is "monosexual," meaning it recognizes only one sex—the male—and defines woman not as her own distinct entity, but merely as a "negative" or a lack of the male. This Sex Which Is Not One
(originally published in French as Ce sexe qui n'en est pas un in 1977) is a foundational text in French feminist theory and continental philosophy written by psychoanalyst and philosopher Luce Irigaray. (originally published in French as Ce sexe qui
Luce Irigaray’s This Sex Which Is Not One is a radical call to invent a new language and a new social order. She demands that women refuse to be the passive mirrors reflecting male identity. Instead, she urges women to speak a language of their own—one that celebrates plurality, autoeroticism, and difference. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more Instead, she urges women to speak a language
Some critics argue that by focusing so heavily on the biological metaphor of the "two lips," Irigaray reduces womanhood to biology.
Irigaray uses the imagery of the of the vulva. They are always in contact with each other, constantly touching without a subject/object division.