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Abstract

<JATS1:p>This book retraces maternal philosophy by presenting an alternative genealogy andproviding a concrete definition of the term (m)other. Most importantly, it introduces anew theory of The Gaze Economy in order to evaluate characters in films andmeasure its effect on the subjectivity of mothers.</JATS1:p> <JATS1:p>This book looks at philosophical traditions that excluded female voices and that codified women into motherhood and labor of care. From the philosophical foundation, the book moves toward presenting key ideas linked to maternal subjectivity, arguing that maternal subjectivity is rhizomatic, rather than just a split.</JATS1:p> <JATS1:p>The central inquiries lead to the concept of (m)others and the discourses that this concept and these identities highlight, discussing maternal politics and the dispossession of maternal bodies into certain spaces to understand the importance of looking into the performativity of the maternal in both, fictional and non-fictional spaces. The author uses The Gaze Economy to look at the performativity of mothers as much as its aesthetic representation.</JATS1:p>

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Keywords

maternal book subjectivity mothers presenting

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