also persists under a variety of guises in Irigaray’s most recent publications - publications that, too, concern precisely the question of an ethical relation between sexuate subjects, who are at times considered to be their own distinct ‘places’. In this book, her discussion of Aristotelian topos tells us that the relation between sexuate subjects can be thought ‘only by passing back through the definition of place’ (p. Although she already tackles the question of place in various modes in Speculum, many recognize Luce Irigaray’s first explicit discussion of place as occurring in An Ethics of Sexual Difference.
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