(Paris, 1908-1986) French thinker and novelist, representative of the atheist existentialist movement and an important figure in the vindication of women's rights. Originally from a bourgeois family, she stood out from an early age as a brilliant student. She studied at the Sorbonne and in 1929 she met Jean-Paul Sartre, who became her companion for the rest of her life.

He graduated in philosophy and until 1943 he devoted himself to teaching at the lycées of Marseilles, Rouen and Paris. His first work was the novel The Guest (1943), followed by The Blood of Others (1944) and the essay Pyrrhus and Cineas (1944). She participated intensely in the ideological debates of the time, harshly attacked the French right wing and assumed the role of a committed intellectual. In her literary texts she revised the concepts of history and character and incorporated, from an existentialist point of view, the themes of "freedom", "situation" and "commitment".

Together with Sartre, Albert Camus and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, among others, she founded the magazine Tiempos Modernos, whose first issue was published on October 15, 1945 and became a political and cultural reference of French thought in the mid-twentieth century. Subsequently, he published the novel All Men Are Mortal (1946), and the essays For a Morality of Ambiguity (1947) and America a Day (1948).

Her book The Second Sex (1949) was a theoretical starting point for various feminist groups, and became a classic work of contemporary thought. In it she elaborated a history of the social condition of women and analyzed the different characteristics of male oppression. She asserted that by being excluded from the processes of production and confined to the home and reproductive functions, women lost all social ties and with them the possibility of being free. She analyzed the gender situation from the point of view of biology, psychoanalysis and Marxism; she destroyed feminine myths, and urged the search for authentic liberation. She argued that the struggle for the emancipation of women was distinct from and parallel to the class struggle, and that the main problem to be faced by the "weaker sex" was not ideological but economic.

Simone de Beauvoir founded with some feminists the League of Women's Rights, which set out to react firmly to any sexist discrimination, and prepared a special issue of Modern Times devoted to the discussion of the subject. She won the Prix Goncourt with The Mandarins (1954), in which she dealt with the difficulties of post-war intellectuals in assuming their social responsibility. In 1966 she participated in the Russell Tribunal, in May 1968 she showed solidarity with the students led by Daniel Cohn-Bendit, in 1972 she presided over the Choisir association, in charge of defending free contraception, and until her last days she was a tireless fighter for human rights.

Her abundant testimonial and autobiographical titles include Memoirs of a Formal Young Woman (1958), The Fullness of Life (1960), The Force of Things (1963), A Very Sweet Death (1964), Old Age (1968), The End of Accounts (1972) and The Farewell Ceremony (1981).

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  • KittyBobo [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Drugs should be a thing you take every now and the to enhance your fun, not something you need all the time just to make life tolerable. That being said this legal weed infused seltzer sucks, it tastes foul, but I paid for them so I'm drinking them anyway.

    • bigboopballs [he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Drugs should be a thing you take every now and the to enhance your fun, not something you need all the time just to make life tolerable.

      yes, I agree. But coffee is so good.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      CW: Drugs

      spoiler

      I tried ketamine therapy for severe treatment resistant depression. Didn't work unfortunately (though most people who have failed to respond to other treatments respond well to it, so ask your doctor about it if you've not had good results with other interventions. Also - Highly recommend bringing music to listen to, since 45 minutes of therapy stretches out to about 8 million years. I really enjoyed listening The Wall.) But I wish I could go in ever couple of months and get the infusion to just go to that weird space to do introspection for eleven million years in the span of 45 minutes. I had a lot of good thoughts while I was "in there" and it was a safe, regulated environment where I knew exactly what I was getting. that said, I am weirdly not-prone to substance addiction so It's definitely not for everyone.

      • dualmindblade [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        If you can afford going outside insurance, get some from a telehealth doctor maybe?Currently doing that very thing, no miracles for me either although it does seem to have an effect, a small one, unlike the other 30 things I've tried. It's expensive but also easy if you're in the US. Also if you just like the headspace and aren't worried about addiction there are supposedly still a bunch of good dissociatives to be had from research chemical vendors.