
Helene Cixous's Poetics of Voice
Echo-Subjectivity-Diffraction
Birgit M. Kaiser(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic (Publisher)
Published on 19. February 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
240 pages
978-1-350-40475-5 (ISBN)
Description
Exploring the poetic fictions of prominent French, feminist writer Helene Cixous, this open access book highlights rich and timely ideas of selfhood in her work. With careful elaboration of the writer's relationship with Algeria, Birgit M. Kaiser shows how Cixous reflects on experiences of colonial and patriarchal othering. More than that, she crafts a voice - an autofictive "I" - that takes the figure of Echo as a guiding mythology to portray selfhood as diffractive, always already exceeding binary models of self/other that remain central to conceptions of subjectivity. Putting forward the notion of 'echology', Kaiser examines how Cixous performs selfhood within ecologies of cohabitation, thereby critiquing and revising key tenets of psychoanalysis and its narrative of the subject.
Drawing from famous texts such as The Laugh of the Medusa, The Newly Born Woman, and The Portrait of Dora, but also more recent titles like Osnabrueck, So Close, Death Shall be Dethroned or Cixous's collaborations with Adel Abdessemed, Helene Cixous's Poetics of Voice: Echo - Subjectivity - Diffraction offers fresh variations on familiar psychoanalytic and semiotic axes, and new ventures into dialogue with feminist new materialisms.
Elegant, politically dynamic and providing exciting news ways into Cixous's work and poetics, the concept of 'echology' lends new perspectives for feminist and postcolonial formations of selfhood and new imaginations of what it means to be human within planetary life.
The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Utrecht University.
Drawing from famous texts such as The Laugh of the Medusa, The Newly Born Woman, and The Portrait of Dora, but also more recent titles like Osnabrueck, So Close, Death Shall be Dethroned or Cixous's collaborations with Adel Abdessemed, Helene Cixous's Poetics of Voice: Echo - Subjectivity - Diffraction offers fresh variations on familiar psychoanalytic and semiotic axes, and new ventures into dialogue with feminist new materialisms.
Elegant, politically dynamic and providing exciting news ways into Cixous's work and poetics, the concept of 'echology' lends new perspectives for feminist and postcolonial formations of selfhood and new imaginations of what it means to be human within planetary life.
The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Utrecht University.
Reviews / Votes
The book that Anglophone audiences have been waiting for, Helene Cixous's Poetics of Voice develops a meticulous and elegant 'echology' that offers acute insight into Cixous's extensive oeuvre. Sallying back and forth across her work, Kaiser details precise connections with a wider field of international scholarship. Savour it. * Lynn Turner, Reader in Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
10 bw illus
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
371 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-350-40475-5 (9781350404755)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Birgit M. Kaiser is Professor of Comparative Literature at Utrecht University, the Netherlands. She has been a visiting researcher at the Department of Philosophy of the University of Paris-Nanterre (April/May 2017) and at the Department of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies at The Ohio State University, USA. She is co-editor - with Lorna Burns - of Postcolonial Literatures and Deleuze (2012) and editor of Singularity and Transnational Poetics (2015) and is author of Figures of Simplicity (2011) and - with Kathrin Thiele - Diffracted Worlds - Diffractive Readings (2018).
Author
Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Transcultural Aesthetics at Utrecht UniversityUtrecht University, Netherlands
Content
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Voice
Chapter 1: Auto-Writing: On Voice in Helene Cixous
Chapter 2: Making Voice: Superposition or the Chorus that "I" is (Reading Cixous with Barad and Trinh)
Part II: Feminine Writing
Chapter 3: Losing Voice: Medusa's Head and Dora's Throat (Cixous Reading Freud) Chapter 4: Ec(h)ological Writing X Ecriture Feminine (Reading Cixous with Kirby)
Part III: Echology
Chapter 5: Primal Scenes: A German-French-Jewish-Algerian Diffraction (Reading Cixous with Derrida and Fanon)
Chapter 6: Algerian Pas de Deux: Entanglement and the Almost Inaudible Echoes of Lions (Cixous Reading Abdessemed)
Bibliography
Introduction
Part I: Voice
Chapter 1: Auto-Writing: On Voice in Helene Cixous
Chapter 2: Making Voice: Superposition or the Chorus that "I" is (Reading Cixous with Barad and Trinh)
Part II: Feminine Writing
Chapter 3: Losing Voice: Medusa's Head and Dora's Throat (Cixous Reading Freud) Chapter 4: Ec(h)ological Writing X Ecriture Feminine (Reading Cixous with Kirby)
Part III: Echology
Chapter 5: Primal Scenes: A German-French-Jewish-Algerian Diffraction (Reading Cixous with Derrida and Fanon)
Chapter 6: Algerian Pas de Deux: Entanglement and the Almost Inaudible Echoes of Lions (Cixous Reading Abdessemed)
Bibliography