Philosophy Bites

Kate Kirkpatrick on the life and work of Simone de Beauvoir

Jul 8, 2019
Kate Kirkpatrick, a philosopher and biographer of Simone de Beauvoir, offers fresh insights into Beauvoir's life and work. She challenges the stereotype of Beauvoir simply as Sartre's existentialist echo, emphasizing her originality. Kirkpatrick discusses Beauvoir's early influences, the nuances in translating her ideas, and her extensive correspondence with readers. She explores Beauvoir's critique of Sartrean freedom and highlights the reciprocal nature of her relationship with Sartre, shedding light on the importance of biography in understanding her philosophy.
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INSIGHT

Beauvoir's Ideas Preceded Sartre

  • Simone de Beauvoir developed central ideas about becoming a self before meeting Sartre and was influenced by earlier thinkers like Fouillier and Nietzsche.
  • This challenges the view that she merely applied Sartre's existentialism to women and shows independent philosophical roots.
INSIGHT

The Famous Line Has Earlier Roots

  • Beauvoir's famous line echoes earlier French formulations like Fouillier's "one is not born free, but becomes it."
  • Reading these sources reframes "one is not born but becomes a woman" as part of a broader debate about becoming and freedom.
INSIGHT

Translation Changes The Emphasis

  • Kate Kirkpatrick prefers the translation "one is not born but rather becomes a woman" because Beauvoir emphasized individual particularity.
  • Beauvoir's correspondence and support for individual women reinforce this emphasis on singular projects and choices.
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