
Adriana Cavarero
Author · 10 books
Adriana Cavarero teaches philosophy of politics at the University of Verona, Italy, and is a visiting professor at New York University. Her field of research includes classical, modern and contemporary thought, with a special focus on the political significance of philosophy. Two main concerns shape her approach to the Western philosophical tradition. First, the 'thought of sexual difference', a theoretical perspective that enables the deconstruction of Western textuality from a feminist standpoint. Second, the thought of Hannah Arendt, reinterpreted in its most innovative categories: birth, uniqueness, action and narration. The result is an inquiry that foregrounds the individual and unique existence of the human being, as related to body and gender. Cavarero resists both the solitary abstraction of the philosophical Subject, and the volatile fragmentation of the postmodern subject, in the name of the living uniqueness of a self being generated through plural relationships with other human beings, and the acceptance of the constraints of individuality and the body.
Books

Relating Narratives
Storytelling and Selfhood
1997

In Spite of Plato
A Feminist Rewriting of Ancient Philosophy
1995

Toward a Feminist Ethics of Nonviolence
2021

For More than One Voice
Toward a Philosophy of Vocal Expression
2003

Mujeres que amamantan cachorros de lobo
2023

Le filosofie femministe
Due secoli di battaglie teoriche e pratiche
1999

Inclinations
A Critique of Rectitude
2014

In Spite of Plato
Feminist Rewriting of Ancient Philosophy
1990

Horrorism
Naming Contemporary Violence
2007

Donna si nasce
(e qualche volta lo si diventa)
2024