While the phallic writing, also called official or traditional writing, integrates the symbolic
register into a process of representation by and of the word, the feminine writing subverts this
principle when approaching the Real, that is, that which can not be named or represented
because it is below and beyond language. Like the feminine that, for Psychoanalysis, escapes
everything that can be said of it. In this sense, starting from the concept of feminine writing
developed by Lucia Castello Branco, this work seeks to demonstrate how this writing is
fruitfully revealed in the work of Clarice Lispector, more specifically in the novels Perto do
coração selvage (1943), A paixão segundo G.H. (1964) and A hora da estrela (1977). The
path was based on a double border: first, researching the psychoanalytic notions of feminine
and of writing, besides the existing theory on the concept of feminine writing in both
Psychoanalysis and in the Literature, to, in a second moment, make connections with the text
of Clarice Lispector. The reading of the claricean works, based on these questions, showed
how with her feminine writing Clarice Lispector offers theoretical advances to the
psychoanalytic notion of feminine, to its unfolding in contemporary clinical listening and to
the imaginary field from which women constitute themselves as subjects, revealing one more
than the reference to the phallus that ends up widening the possibilities of talking about
women, feminine and femininity.