id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_chbt3ffttzecvoep4h2nyh7e3e Charlotte Knowles Beauvoir on Women's Complicity in Their Own Unfreedom 2019 25 .pdf application/pdf 12327 718 55 complicity in terms of seventeenth-century accounts of slavery and republican freedom, which emphasizes the dependent situation of women as the primary cause of women's complicity, although she develops this analysis through the lens of seventeenth-century accounts of slavery and republican freedom.6 James argues that for Beauvoir, as for the republican theorist, "freedom can only exist between equals who are not In examining Beauvoir's understanding of complicity, I shall argue that her appreciation of the way situation can limit our freedom is far closer to Heidegger's understanding than to Sartre's.16 One sees this, for example, in Beauvoir's use of Focusing on the Heideggerian strands of Beauvoir's analysis will enable us to systematize her account of situation with the idea of woman's active complicity, giving a contra Sartre, who concludes from this "the absolute freedom of human consciousness" (Gothlin 2003, 51), Beauvoir develops a more nuanced account, closer to Heidegger's understanding. ./cache/work_chbt3ffttzecvoep4h2nyh7e3e.pdf ./txt/work_chbt3ffttzecvoep4h2nyh7e3e.txt