Essays on Woman
Stein's 1928-1932 lectures and essays on women — phenomenological-Catholic feminist philosophy
Tradition: Catholic phenomenology / philosophy of woman
Stein's 1928-1932 phenomenological-Catholic essays on women
Essays on Woman (Die Frau, lectures and essays 1928-1932) is Edith Stein's (1891-1942) major philosophical-theological treatment of women, vocation, education, and the intrinsic value and distinct character of women in the Catholic-Thomist-phenomenological frame she had developed since her Husserl-assistantship years (1916-18) and her 1922 conversion from Judaism to Catholicism. The collection brings together public lectures Stein gave between 1928 and 1932 across German Catholic women's-education and women's-association venues — at a moment when Catholic women in Germany were entering the universities, the teaching professions, and skilled work in unprecedented numbers, and were searching for both a defensible Catholic anthropology of women and a practical philosophy of women's education and vocation. Stein's contribution combines four resources: (1) Husserlian phenomenological method, applied to the lived-experience of being a woman; (2) Thomist-Catholic theological anthropology, accepting the male-female complementarity but interpreting it in non-subordinationist directions; (3) practical-educational experience from Stein's own teaching at the German Institute for Pedagogy in Münster (1932-33) and her earlier Speyer years; (4) the broader resources of German-Catholic Frauenbewegung debate (Helene Weber, Gertrud von le Fort, others). Stein's distinctive theses: women have a distinctive 'soul-form' rooted in attentive personal-and-relational orientation, but this is compatible with the full range of intellectual-and-professional life including university teaching, scholarship, law, medicine, and public administration; women's education must train both the personal-relational and the intellectual-professional capacities. Stein entered the Carmelite order in 1933 (taking the name Teresia Benedicta a Cruce), was deported with her sister Rosa from the Echt Carmelite convent and murdered at Auschwitz in 1942, and was canonised by Pope John Paul II in 1998 and named co-patron of Europe. Essays on Woman is foundational to subsequent Catholic-personalist feminism (Wojtyła, Schumacher, Allen, Beattie).
Editions cited
- Die Frau: Ihre Aufgabe nach Natur und Gnade (collected German edition, multiple posthumous arrangements)
- Edith Stein Gesamtausgabe (Herder, ongoing edition), Band 13
- English: Essays on Woman, trans. Freda Mary Oben (ICS Publications, Collected Works of Edith Stein vol. II, 1987; 2nd ed. 1996)
- Earlier translation Selected Writings on Woman by Oben
School Embodiments
Major Catholic-phenomenological feminist work.
"Catholic-feminist phenomenology." (Essays on Woman)
Phenomenological-anthropological work on woman.
"Phenomenological anthropology of woman." (Essays on Woman)
Catholic-theological philosophy of woman.
"Catholic-theological framework on woman." (Essays on Woman)
Phenomenological ethics of vocation.
"Phenomenological ethics of vocation." (Essays on Woman)
Roman Catholic tradition.
Christian-mystical tradition.
Internal Tensions
Essays on Woman has been foundational to subsequent Catholic-personalist feminism. The book's account of woman's distinctive 'soul-form' is variously read: by Wojtyła and the Theology-of-the-Body tradition as basis for a strong complementarity-feminism, by Tina Beattie and others as needing critical retrieval beyond Stein's residual essentialism, by Sister Prudence Allen as a major mid-twentieth-century Catholic philosophical anthropology of women.
I. Time
Lectures 1928-1932; pre-conversion-to-Carmel public-philosophical period; Weimar Germany transitioning toward Nazi seizure.
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II. Space
Speyer, Münster, and broader German Catholic women's-education and women's-association venues; subsequent transnational Catholic-philosophical readership.
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III. Matter
Women's vocation, education, intellectual-and-professional life, theological-anthropological complementarity, the lived-experience of being a woman.
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IV. Observer
Pre-Carmel Stein — phenomenologist-Catholic-philosopher-educator; about to enter the Carmelite order in 1933.
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V. Energy
Phenomenological-pedagogical, Catholic-anthropological, public-philosophical-feminist energies.
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VI. Information
Lecture-and-essay collection; combines phenomenological-descriptive analysis with theological-anthropological-and-pedagogical argument; aimed at educated Catholic women audiences.
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Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Essays on Woman resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 13 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas, all mainstream
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.