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  1.  19
    Freud, Proust and Lacan: Theory as Fiction.Margaret Gray-McDonald & Malcolm Bowie - 1989 - Substance 18 (1):89.
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  2.  2
    Freud's Dreams of Knowledge.Malcolm Bowie - 1983 - Paragraph 2 (1):53-87.
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  3. Introduction to Judith Butler.Malcolm Bowie - 2005 - In Nicholas Bamforth (ed.), Sex Rights: The Oxford Amnesty Lectures 2002. Oxford University Press. pp. 44.
  4.  8
    The Morality of Proust: An Inaugural Lecture Delivered Before the University of Oxford on 25 November 1993.Malcolm Bowie - 1994 - Clarendon Press.
    How does it come about that a novel containing thousands of moral statements is seldom critically examined from a moral point of view? In his inaugural lecture, Professor Bowie presents Proust's narrator as a moral theorist obsessively concerned with the definition of virtue and vice. Bowieargues not just that the moral language of Proust is sufficiently strange and provocative to repay close study but that A la recherche du temps perdu has a distinctive moral architecture which deserves to be included (...)
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  5.  19
    MALLARMÉ: Serenity and Violence.Malcolm Bowie - 2000 - Angelaki 5 (1):181-187.
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