How To Use Beauvoir In A Sentence

  • Simone de Beauvoir jump-started the feminist movement with a book titled The Second Sex.
  • As the French feminist Simone de Beauvoir put it: ‘Sade's perverse bucolics have the grim austerity of a nudist colony.’
  • A vital and life-changing work that has dramatically revised the way women talk and think about themselves, Beauvoir's magisterial treatise continues to provoke and inspire.
  • Simone de Beauvoir brought to our knowledge the recognition of the distorted situation of women.
  • That kind of freewheeling, unashamedly hearty sexual appetite and success has been the role model ever since ... well, ever since Simone de Beauvoir, whose nude photo (back view) is on the cover of this week's Nouvel Observateur. Sarkozy in Love
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  • I started work on Simone de Beauvoir because she is the greatest feminist thinker of the twentieth century.
  • One of the things I inferred from the article was that the author felt that de Beauvoir was somehow living the open relationship because it was what Sartre wanted, subsuming her own desires and mores to his, as it were.
  • If you want to be a feminist intellectual, you have to study Simone de Beauvoir.
  • The back cover of Dancing with de Beauvoir claims, rather opportunistically, that it is ‘a book for anyone who has ever fallen in love with France and wondered why’.
  • Simone de Beauvoir's novel is a kind of Philosophical Novel and Theoretical Novel, which is provided with the function of arguing and conveying philosophy thoughts.
  • This article aims to analyze the thoughts of two most influential feminists in the dawn of the second women's movement-Simone de Beauvoir and Betty Friedan.
  • When naming female philosophers, only two initially come to my mind: Ayn Rand and Simone de Beauvoir, but Hannah Arendt (1906-1976), was one of the 20th century's most innovative political theorists.
  • Each side had its share of engagé intellectuals: Martin Heidegger on the right; De Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre on the left; and Arendt on neither side.
  • Beauvoir, Alphonse Karr, Émile Souvestre, who, to no small extent individually and to a very great extent when taken in battalion, helped to conquer that supreme reputation for amusingness, for pastime, which the French novel has so long enjoyed throughout Europe. A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 To the Close of the 19th Century
  • Beauvoir is well-known all over the world as a famous existentialist philosopher, ideologist, litterateur, social activist and a spiritual leader of feminism.
  • Simone de Beauvoir's novel is a kind of Philosophical Novel and Theoretical Novel, which is provided with the function of arguing and conveying philosophy thoughts.
  • What are the intellectual resources you see in the existentialist feminism of Beauvoir which have stimulated your vital new insights in feminist theory?
  • I started work on Simone de Beauvoir because she is the greatest feminist thinker of the twentieth century.
  • No one ever had a better fix on the Marquis de Sade than Simone de Beauvoir, who called his erotic life "a combination of passionate sexual appetites with a basic emotional 'apartness'. A Divided Nature
  • Often criticized as a mark of Beauvoir's heterosexism, this remark (among others) is not made in ignorance of lesbian sexuality and is not a rejection of non-heterosexual sexualities.
  • Parshley knew French only from his years as a student at Boston Latin School and Harvard, and had no training in philosophy — certainly not in the new movement known as existentialism, of which Beauvoir was an adherent. Feminist Classic Censored by Copyright Laws
  • Simone de Beauvoir's "Le Deuxieme Sex" is a significant feminism philosophical writing.
  • She does confess to like Sade, Gautier, Balzac, Baudelaire, Huysmans, Sartre whom I find difficult to stomach, de Beauvoir, Genet and Bachelard. American academics down on their knees kissing French bums « Jahsonic
  • A vital and life-changing work that has dramatically revised the way women talk and think about themselves, Beauvoir's magisterial treatise continues to provoke and inspire.
  • This handy-dandy cliche is generally attributed to Simone de Beauvoir in her book The Second Sex – this translation is from Wikiquote: Yet another trans 101, in which Helen tells cis people What’s What
  • Set against the wartime Parisian intellectual society, The Mandarins revealed Simone de Beauvoir's relations with the existentialist philosopher Jean Paul Sartre.

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