Daybreak

The Vocation of the Intellectual Woman

47 min · 4. juni 2025
episode The Vocation of the Intellectual Woman cover

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Daybreak hits the road. Join us as we visit the Pacific Division of the APA in San Francisco to take part in a groundbreaking panel on the work of Amalia Holst. The episode centres on a talk by Dalia Nassar on the vocation debate in eighteenth century Germany: what is the human being and what ought we become? Dalia draws on the work of Germaine de Staël and Amalia Holst to expose the exclusion of women from the human vocation and to challenge the neglect of women philosophers in the canon. Here's a link to Dalia's research [https://www.sydney.edu.au/arts/about/our-people/academic-staff/dalia-nassar.html].

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episode Beauvoir and Critical Phenomenology cover

Beauvoir and Critical Phenomenology

Simone de Beauvoir is often placed in the shadow of Sartre, read first and foremost as an existentialist first. But what if we’ve been missing something crucial? In this episode of Daybreak, we uncover Beauvoir’s critical phenomenology—a method that doesn’t just describe experience but interrogates the structures of power, embodiment, and oppression that shape it. This episode explores a recent paper by Johanna Oksala, “The Method of Critical Phenomenology: Simone de Beauvoir as a Phenomenologist”. With Tobias Keiling, Clarissa Müller-Kosmarov, and Andrew Cooper, Johanna identifies how Beauvoir reworks phenomenology to account for gender, freedom, and lived experience in ways that surpass Husserl and Heidegger. What does it mean to approach philosophy as both description and critique? And why is Beauvoir’s method still urgent today? Here's a link to Johanna’s paper [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ejop.12782].

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