Gloria Margarita Comesaña Santalices (5 December 1946 – 18 March 2024) was a Spanish feminist philosopher based in Venezuela. She was co-founder of the Maracaibo Feminist League and the Maracaibo Women's House, as well as co-founder of the Venezuelan University Network of Women's Studies (Reuevem) and in 1991, founding coordinator of the Free Women's Course at the University of Zulia.[1]

Gloria Comesaña
Born
Gloria Margarita Comesaña Santalices

(1946-12-05)5 December 1946
Vigo, Spain
Died18 March 2024(2024-03-18) (aged 77)
Maracaibo, Venezuela
NationalitySpanish
Alma materUniversity of Zulia
OccupationPhilosopher

Biography

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As a philosopher, Comesaña holds a PhD in philosophy from the Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne University, France. She has specialized in women's studies, has developed an extensive career both as a teacher and writer, and has developed her own work, publishing numerous works on contemporary philosophy and feminist theory in national and international journals, as well as several books.[2]

Her works include Mujer, Poder y Violencia, Filosofía, Feminismo y Cambio Social and La alteridad: estructura ontológica de las relaciones entre los sexos. She has studied the currents of Sartrean existentialism, dialectical materialism, ecotheology and Hannah Arendt's work. Among the philosophers and thinkers she has admired are Søren Kierkegaard, Martin Heidegger, Karl Jaspers, Gabriel Marcel and the theologian Rosemary Radford Ruether. In a philosophy magazine of the University of Zulia (LUZ) she denied that she had been a disciple of Simone de Beauvoir (one of the founders of feminist thought of the 20th century), an urban legend, although she attended a cycle of lectures by Beauvoir at the University of Paris I.[2]

At LUZ she taught in the doctoral programs in human sciences and architecture. She has been a visiting professor at the Catholic University Cecilio Acosta and research advisor to the Faculty of Philosophy and Theology of said university.[2]

Comesaña was co-founder of the Maracaibo Feminist League along with Gladys Tinedo, Mary Pampolini, Fátima Borges, Beatriz Rincón, Consuelo Arconada, Alba Carosio, Trina Erebrie and Teresa Sosa, and of the Maracaibo Women's House. She was founder and coordinator of the Free Women's Course at the School of Philosophy of the University of Zulia and is co-founder of the Venezuelan University Network of Women's Studies (Reuevem). She was also producer of the radio program Todas a Una on university radio.[2]

Selected works

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  • Alineación y Libertad: la doctrina sartreana del otro[3]
  • Análisis de las figuras femeninas en el teatro sartrean[3]
  • Mujer, Poder y Violencia[3][2]
  • Filosofía, Feminismo y Cambio Social[3][2]
  • De métodos y filosofía feminista[3]
  • La alteridad: estructura ontológica de las relaciones entre los sexos[3][2]
  • El machismo, ideología nefasta[3]

References

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  1. ^ Morillo, Danisbel Gómez (2024-03-19). "Falleció en Maracaibo la filósofa feminista Gloria Comesaña". Efecto Cocuyo (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-03-19.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Dagnino, Maruja. "Gloria Comesaña". In Transparencia Venezuela (ed.). 20 mujeres venezolanas del siglo XX (PDF). pp. 59–62. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Comesaña, Gloria M. (1980). [1 de abril de 2018 Alineación y libertad : la doctrina sartreana del otro]. Oficina Latinoamericana de investigaciones jurídicas y sociales. {{cite book}}: |archive-url= requires |archive-date= (help); Check |archive-url= value (help); External link in |author-link5= (help)