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Reviews for Quantization, nonlinear partial differential equations, and operator algebra

 Quantization magazine reviews

The average rating for Quantization, nonlinear partial differential equations, and operator algebra based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2021-03-31 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Suzanne Goebelt
This book is very important because it creates a new model through which to consider the wrongs of rape and how rape culture might be remedied in Western society. This model is one of embodiment and intersubjectivity, and it revises the claims of Brownmiller (who suggests that rape is not a sexual crime but an act of conquest) and MacKinnon (who considers rape to be contiguous with heterosexual sex relations generally). Taking what is good about Brownmiller's and MacKinnon's arguments, Cahill rethinks how and why rape happens and what we can do to prevent it.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-05-28 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Asdf Adsdf
Cahill starts out from the classic conflict between feminist arguments that "rape is essentially violence" (Brownmiller, liberal feminists) vs. "rape is essentially sex" (MacKinnon, Dworkin, radical feminists). Cahill deftly shows that contemporary (continental) feminist insights into sex and the subject as corporeal and intersubjectively constituted makes clear that both positions are untenable. Rape is both sex and violence. While this may have already been clear according to (feminist) conventional wisdom today, this book is nonetheless useful for tracing the implications of this fact, especially for understanding the complex harms of rape (and, crucially, of the latent threat of rape in everyday life). If Cahill's description of women's self-defense as central to resistance is not fully developed, that's because it isn't really what this book is about. She should be lauded for moving toward the question of resistance in her final chapter, rather than criticized for what she doesn't say. (I recommend reading Sharon Marcus "Fighting Bodies, Fighting Words" (1992) on resisting rape if you're interested in women's self-defense... she also doesn't address issues like implications for other cultural notions of femininity and the difficulties of such resistance against acquaintances and family members, but hers is an insightful account from an earlier moment in this conversation.)


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