The Sexual Difference

The Sexual Difference

JPI 550/850
3 Credits

“Sexual difference is one of the important questions of our age, if not in fact the burning issue. . .. each age is preoccupied with one thing, and one alone.”  This statement made decades ago by the French Philosopher Luce Irigaray, has not lost any of its relevance.  On the contrary.  With the emergence of “gender” as something other than “sex,” and the revolutionary goal to “eliminate the sex distinction itself” (Firestone), the question about its nature becomes ever more urgent. 

This course will examine the nature of sexual difference, considering both the difference as a difference, and as a male and female one. We will begin with an examination of the framework in which all thinking about sexual difference currently takes place, “gender ideology,” looking first at its modern precursors (via Manent and Trueman), then its feminist and transgender instantiations (Beauvoir, Firestone, and Butler).  Next, we will look straightforwardly at the phenomenon of sexual difference, as it belongs to animals generally and humans specifically (Portmann, Jonas, Fortin).  Thirdly we turn to the political dimension of sexual difference (Plato, Aristotle, Pizan). Fourthly, we consider the metaphysical status of sexual difference (Aristotle, Aquinas, etc.).  Fifthly we consider its theological status (Augustine, Aquinas, von Balthasar, Scheeben).  Finally, we take up the sexes in their (correlative) distinctness, as manhood (Ong) and womanhood (Von le Fort, Stein). 

Selected Texts

Faculty

Margaret Harper McCarthy

Margaret Harper McCarthy

Associate Professor of Theological Anthropology

Dr. McCarthy’s teaching and writing focuses on various themes belonging to theological anthropology relative to the question of sexual difference (the imago Dei, equality, experience, feminism, the nature of love), but also relative to the nature-grace question (Christocentrism, predestination, the relation between the church and the world).

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