Teresa Brennan was an Australian feminist philosopher whose work crossed psychoanalysis, philosophy, and social theory, frequently placing her at odds with academic orthodoxy. She challenged dominant Lacanian interpretations by insisting that affect is not a linguistic effect or private feeling but a materially transmissible force that moves between bodies and across institutions. This stance drew […]
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Teresa Brennan: A Feminist Philosophy of Affect
- Post author By G
- Post date Jan 15, 2026
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- Tags affect and power, affect theory, affect transmission, affective labor, autonomy myth, continental philosophy, critical feminism, critical theory, cultural theory, dependency and projection, embodiment theory, epistemology critique, existence precedes essence, existentialism, feminist philosophy, feminist theory, gender and power, gender theory, historical materialism critique, history after lacan, history and psychoanalysis, identity formation, jacques lacan, lacan critique, masculine psychosis, masculinity critique, modernity critique, ontology of relation, patriarchy analysis, philosophy and gender, philosophy and politics, philosophy of affect, philosophy of history, philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, post-lacanian theory, projection and disavowal, psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic feminism, relational ontology, relational systems, social theory, structural dependency, subject formation, subjectivity, systems theory and affect, teresa brennan, the interpretation of the flesh, the transmission of affect, unconscious structures, western epistemology