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  1.  24
    Subject lessons: Hegel, Lacan, and the future of materialism.Russell Sbriglia & Slavoj Žižek (eds.) - 2020 - Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.
    This collection of eleven philosophical essays addresses current trends in materialist philosophy dealing with subject-object relations, amounting to a polemical corrective that insists on the organizing role of the subject within materialist thought.
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  2. Introduction: Subject Matters.Russell Sbriglia & Slavoj Žižek - 2020 - In Russell Sbriglia & Slavoj Žižek (eds.), Subject lessons: Hegel, Lacan, and the future of materialism. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.
     
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  3.  25
    Notes Toward an Extimate Materialism: A Reply to Graham Harman.Russell Sbriglia - 2021 - Open Philosophy 4 (1):106-123.
    This article mounts a defense of my and Slavoj Žižek’s co-edited anthology, Subject Lessons: Hegel, Lacan, and the Future of Materialism, against the two main criticisms of it made throughout Graham Harman’s article “The Battle of Objects and Subjects”: (1) that we and our fellow contributors are guilty of gross overgeneralization when we classify thinkers from various schools of thought – among them New Materialism, object-oriented ontology, speculative realism, and actor–network theory – under the broad rubric of the “new materialisms”; (...)
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  4. Everything you always wanted to know about literature but were afraid to ask Žižek.Russell Sbriglia (ed.) - 2017 - Durham: Duke University Press.
  5. From Sublimity to Sublimation: Hegel, Lacan, Melville.Russell Sbriglia - 2020 - In Russell Sbriglia & Slavoj Žižek (eds.), Subject lessons: Hegel, Lacan, and the future of materialism. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.
     
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  6.  11
    The Logic of Sentiment: Stowe, Hawthorne, and Melville by Kenneth Dauber.Russell Sbriglia - 2021 - Philosophy and Literature 45 (2):499-505.
    As a work of philosophically grounded literary criticism in the tradition of Stanley Cavell's ordinary language philosophy, Kenneth Dauber's The Logic of Sentiment: Stowe, Hawthorne, and Melville will be an altogether welcomed book among those for whom it is more instructive to think sentimentality alongside literary authors than to merely historicize—to "archeologize" or "genealogize"—it from an all-too-safe critical distance. Though primarily a book on sentiment, its theoretical through line is to think skepticism outside of the epistemological, to think it in (...)
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  7. The symptoms of ideology critique; or, How we learned to enjoy the symptom and ignore the fetish.Russell Sbriglia - 2017 - In Everything you always wanted to know about literature but were afraid to ask Žižek. Duke University Press.
     
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