the Who Has Lost Something but Knows Where to Find It: Iroquois \"Law\" and the Withdrawal of the Origin

Dialogue and Universalism 15 (3-4):147-160 (2005)
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Abstract

Inspired by Nietzsche’s insistence that we exploit actual history and Foucault’s extrapolation of Nietzsche’s project, my explication of the logic of originary withdrawal is centered around an analysis of an historical account of origin; here, we turn to the image of the original lawgiver, as depicted in the Iroquois foundation narrative, the narrative that serves to constitute their political community. This analysis helps to cultivate an alternative understanding of political necessity by starting with the traces of a material discourse from the past and, more important, about the past rather than starting with theory

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