Results for ' The Beast and the Sovereign'

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  1.  20
    The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume I.Jacques Derrida - 2009 - University of Chicago Press.
    "When he died in 2004, Jacques Derrida left behind a vast legacy of unpublished material, much of it in the form of written lectures. With The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume I, the University of Chicago Press launches an ambitious series of English translations of these important works based upon the meticulously established original French editions." "In this seminar from 2001 and 2002, Derrida explores the persistent association of bestiality or animality with sovereignty and continues his deconstruction of (...)
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  2.  8
    The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume Ii.Jacques Derrida - 2011 - University of Chicago Press.
    Following on from The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume I, this book extends Jacques Derrida’s exploration of the connections between animality and sovereignty. In this second year of the seminar, originally presented in 2002–2003 as the last course he would give before his death, Derrida focuses on two markedly different texts: Heidegger’s 1929–1930 course The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics, and Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. As he moves back and forth between the two works, Derrida pursuesthe relations between solitude, (...)
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  3.  3
    The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume Ii.Geoffrey Bennington (ed.) - 2011 - University of Chicago Press.
    Following on from _The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume I_, this book extends Jacques Derrida’s exploration of the connections between animality and sovereignty. In this second year of the seminar, originally presented in 2002–2003 as the last course he would give before his death, Derrida focuses on two markedly different texts: Heidegger’s 1929–1930 course _The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics, _and Daniel Defoe’s _Robinson Crusoe. _As he moves back and forth between the two works, Derrida pursuesthe relations between solitude, (...)
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  4.  5
    The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume I.Geoffrey Bennington (ed.) - 2009 - University of Chicago Press.
    When he died in 2004, Jacques Derrida left behind a vast legacy of unpublished material, much of it in the form of written lectures. With _The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume 1_, the University of Chicago Press inaugurates an ambitious series, edited by Geoffrey Bennington and Peggy Kamuf, translating these important works into English. _The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume 1_ launches the series with Derrida’s exploration of the persistent association of bestiality or animality with sovereignty. (...)
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  5.  10
    Derrida and Our Animal Others: Derrida's Final Seminar, "the Beast and the Sovereign".David Farrell Krell - 2013 - Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
    Jacques Derrida’s final seminars were devoted to animal life and political sovereignty—the connection being that animals slavishly adhere to the law while kings and gods tower above it and that this relationship reveals much about humanity in the West. David Farrell Krell offers a detailed account of these seminars, placing them in the context of Derrida’s late work and his critique of Heidegger. Krell focuses his discussion on questions such as death, language, and animality. He concludes that Heidegger and Derrida (...)
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  6.  16
    Derrida and Our Animal Others: Derrida’s Final Seminar, the Beast and the Sovereign.David Farrell Krell - 2013 - Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
    Jacques Derrida’s final seminars were devoted to animal life and political sovereignty—the connection being that animals slavishly adhere to the law while kings and gods tower above it and that this relationship reveals much about humanity in the West. David Farrell Krell offers a detailed account of these seminars, placing them in the context of Derrida’s late work and his critique of Heidegger. Krell focuses his discussion on questions such as death, language, and animality. He concludes that Heidegger and Derrida (...)
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  7.  22
    Fictionalism and Aesthetic Experience in The Beast and the Sovereign.Ammon Allred - 2023 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 37 (3):415-425.
    ABSTRACT This article analyzes the figure of the end of the world in the final lecture of Derrida’s The Beast and the Sovereign seminar series (the last seminar series he gives). The author argues that Derrida uses the final line of a Paul Celan poem (“The world is gone. I must carry you.”) as a valedictory refrain in order to show the political and existential stakes of his ontological investigations. The article situates these stakes within Derrida’s fictionalism, his (...)
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  8.  19
    The Beast and the Sovereign according to Hobbes.Arnaud Milanese - 2016 - Philosophy Today 60 (1):71-88.
    Hobbes obviously thought politics with metaphors relating politics to bestiality and monstrosity: in De Cive, a man is a wolf to a man, and two of his major political books are entitled with the name of a biblical monster, Leviathan and Behemoth. Did Hobbes mean that political problems emerge from a natural violence of men and that the political solution to these problems must be found in sovereign violence? This contribution tries to demonstrate that these references do not outline (...)
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  9.  20
    The Beast and the Sovereign according to Hobbes.Arnaud Milanese - 2016 - Philosophy Today 60 (1):71-88.
    Hobbes obviously thought politics with metaphors relating politics to bestiality and monstrosity: in De Cive, a man is a wolf to a man, and two of his major political books are entitled with the name of a biblical monster, Leviathan and Behemoth. Did Hobbes mean that political problems emerge from a natural violence of men and that the political solution to these problems must be found in sovereign violence? This contribution tries to demonstrate that these references do not outline (...)
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  10. on Jacques Derrida's The Beast and the Sovereign.Adriana Cavarero & Maurizio Ferraris - 2010 - Iris. European Journal of Philosophy and Public Debate 2 (4):491-506.
  11.  20
    The Final Seminars of Jacques Derrida: ‘The Beast and the Sovereign’The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume I, 2001–2, edited by Michel Lisse, Marie-Louise Mallet and Ginette Michaud, translated by Geoffrey Bennington , 349 pp.The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume II, 2002–3, edited by Michel Lisse, Marie-Louise Mallet and Ginette Michaud, translated by Geoffrey Bennington , 293 pp. [REVIEW]Marian Hobson - 2012 - Paragraph 35 (3):435-450.
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  12.  63
    The Beast and the Sovereign, volume 1, by Jacques Derrida. [REVIEW]Alexander García Düttmann - 2011 - European Journal of Philosophy 19 (1):158-160.
  13. A Hegelian Reading of Derrida’s The Beast and the Sovereign, Vol. I, to Philosophically Expound Ambedkar’s Critique of Caste in his 1932 “Statement of Gandhji’s Fast”.Rajesh Sampath - 2019 - Symposion: Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences 6 (1):79-96.
    This paper will attempt a Hegelian reading of Derrida’s Beast and the Sovereign Vol 1 lectures to unpack certain apories and paradoxes in Ambedkar’s brief 1932 statement on modern India’s founding figure, Gandhi. In that small text Ambedkar is critical of Gandhi’s seemingly saintly attempt at fasting himself to death. Ambedkar diagnoses that Gandhi’s act of self-sacrifice conceals a type of subtle coercion of certain political decisions during India’s independent movement from British colonialism. In order to unpack philosophical (...)
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  14.  12
    A Hegelian Reading of Derrida’s The Beast and the Sovereign, Vol. I, to Philosophically Expound Ambedkar’s Critique of Caste in his 1932 “Statement of Gandhji’s Fast”.Rajesh Sampath - forthcoming - Symposion. Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences.
    Rajesh Sampath ABSTRACT: This paper will attempt a Hegelian reading of Derrida’s Beast and the Sovereign Vol 1 lectures to unpack certain apories and paradoxes in Ambedkar’s brief 1932 statement on modern India’s founding figure, Gandhi. In that small text Ambedkar is critical of Gandhi’s seemingly saintly attempt at fasting himself to death. Ambedkar diagnoses...
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  15. Review of Jacques Derrida, The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume 1[REVIEW]David Wills - 2010 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (4).
  16.  16
    David Farrell Krell, Derrida and Our Animal Others: Derrida's Final Seminar, ‘The Beast and the Sovereign’, Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2013. 196 pp. $20.00. ISBN 978-0-2530-0933-3. [REVIEW]Rick Elmore - 2014 - Derrida Today 7 (2):225-230.
  17.  1
    The beast & the sovereign.Jacques Derrida - 2009 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Geoffrey Bennington.
    When he died in 2004, Jacques Derrida left behind a vast legacy of unpublished material, much of it in the form of written lectures. With The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume 1, the University of Chicago Press inaugurates an ambitious series, edited by Geoffrey Bennington and Peggy Kamuf, translating these important works into English. The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume 1 launches the series with Derrida’s exploration of the persistent association of bestiality or animality with sovereignty. (...)
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  18.  66
    Between the She-Wolf and Little Red Riding Hood: The Figure of the Girl in Derrida's The Beast and The Sovereign.Kelly Oliver - 2011 - Derrida Today 4 (2):257-280.
    This essay explores the important role played by the figure of the virgin girl at the centre of The Beast and The Sovereign. Derrida hints that she may offer a figure between the beast and the sovereign, between the two marionettes of Nature and Culture. Moreover, it seems that she is both what props up the fabled distinction between man and animal and at the same time that upon which man erects himself as sovereign lord (...)
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  19. The Wolves of the World: Derrida on the Political Symbolism of the Beast and the Sovereign.Gavin Rae - 2018 - In James Tink and Sarah Bezan (ed.), Seeing Animals after Derrida. pp. 3-19.
  20. The wolves of the world : Derrida on the political symbolism of the beast and the sovereign.Gavin Rae - 2018 - In Sarah Bezan & James Tink (eds.), Seeing animals after Derrida. Lanham: Lexington Books.
     
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  21.  13
    Derrida’s Preoccupation with the Archive in The Beast and the Sovereign.M. Chrulew, C. Danta & M. Naas - 2014 - Substance 43 (2):20-36.
  22.  4
    The “Slow and Differentiated” Machinations of Deconstructive Ethics.Kelly Oliver - 2014 - In Zeynep Direk & Leonard Lawlor (eds.), A Companion to Derrida. Oxford, UK: Wiley. pp. 105–121.
    In this chapter the author tracks the ethics of deconstruction as it moves through The Beast and the Sovereign, to see where it leads us and where it leaves us; and examines the role of the machine in Derrida's deconstructive project, particularly as it operates in this seminar. He shows how machine is another nickname for the operation of difference in so far as it is an undecidable figure or concept that both works for and against the binary (...)
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  23.  25
    Stupidity and the Threshold of Life, Language and Law in Derrida and Agamben.Duy Lap Nguyen - 2019 - Derrida Today 12 (1):41-58.
    This paper examines Jacques Derrida's deconstruction of Giorgio Agamben's account of the history of bio-politics in the Beast and the Sovereign. In this account, the ‘threshold of bio-political modernity’ is identified with the collapse of an allegedly immemorial distinction between life and the law. According to Derrida, however, this in-distinction between life and the law, which supposedly marks the historical emergence of the bio-political, is in fact an originary event. Agamben, therefore, announces a bio-political modernity that has always (...)
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  24.  33
    From Within the Belly of the Beast: Rethinking the Concept of the 'Educational Marketplace' in the Popular Discourse of Education Reform.Scott Ellison - 2012 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 48 (2):119-136.
    The task of this article is to carry out a synthetic analysis of the concept of the educational marketplace as it is used in the popular discourse of education reform so as to unpack what has become a commonsensical idea in American politics. It is a conceptual framework that has opened an ever-expanding sovereign space in the American state for the colonization of a public institution by the private sphere by means of public policy. The results of this analysis (...)
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  25.  38
    Animality in Lacan and Derrida: the Deconstruction of the Other.Zeynep Direk - 2018 - Sophia 57 (1):21-37.
    In The Beast and the Sovereign, Derrida’s last seminar, Derrida criticizes Lacan for making no room for animality in the Other, in the unconscious transindividual normativity of language. In this paper, I take into account the history of Derrida’s interactions with Lacan’s psychoanalysis to argue that Derrida’s early agreement with Lacan’s conception of subjectivity as split by the signifier gives place in his late thought to a deconstruction of Lacan’s fall into humanist metaphysics, which makes a sharp moral (...)
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  26.  10
    Derrida and other animals: the boundaries of the human.Judith Still - 2015 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Judith Still offers a comprehensive discussion of Derrida's contribution to the long-standing philosophical and political debate which insists on defining 'man' against 'the animal'. She makes extensive reference to the two volumes recently published, in French and English, of Derrida's seminar series The Beast and the Sovereign, with particular attention to his source texts such as Defoe, Hobbes, La Fontaine, Rousseau, Agamben and Heidegger.
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  27.  8
    The End of the World and Other Teachable Moments: Jacques Derrida's Final Seminar.Michael Naas - 2014 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    The End of the World and Other Teachable Moments follows the remarkable itinerary of Jacques Derrida’s final seminar, “The Beast and the Sovereign”, as the explicit themes of the seminar—namely, sovereignty and the question of the animal—come to be supplemented and interrupted by questions of death, mourning, survival, the archive, and, especially, the end of the world. The book begins with Derrida’s analyses, in the first year of the seminar, of the question of the animal in the context (...)
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  28.  29
    The Monolingualism of the Human.Christopher Peterson - 2014 - Substance 43 (2):83-99.
    In The Beast and The Sovereign Volume 2, a collection of ten lectures focused on the “odd couple” of Heidegger and Robinson Crusoe, Jacques Derrida devotes a substantial portion of his second lecture to one of the most well-known scenes in Defoe’s novel: Robinson’s discovery of “the print of a man’s naked foot on the shore” (Derrida 31, Defoe 162). Having lived alone on his island for fifteen years, Robinson is “thunder-struck,” as if having “seen an apparition” (162). (...)
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  29. Somewhere Between the Beasts and the Angels: Thomistic Philosophical Anthropology as a Schema to Reorient Modern Psychology towards Human Experience in the Lifeworld.Adam L. Barborich - 2022 - Science for Seminaries.
    Modern empirical psychology, as a reductionist, materialist, and positivist science, has to a great extent replaced philosophical psychology – or more precisely philosophical anthropology– in our contemporary world, and this has caused modern psychology to lose sight of what was most interesting in pre-modern psychology, namely the attempt to situate the human person in his experience of reality in the lifeworld (lebenswelt). This has resulted in the practice of psychology becoming detached from the realities of lived experience as its view (...)
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  30.  18
    Individuation, the Mass and Farm Animals.Henry Buller - 2013 - Theory, Culture and Society 30 (7-8):155-175.
    The singular ‘farm’ is increasingly a place of ever-greater multitudes, a deceptive and porous whole that is, in so many ways, very much less than the sum of its constituent parts. What might stand as a seemingly fixed entity or unit is, in reality, a constant flow and passage of multiple life ( zoe) and individual lives ( bios). To borrow from Heraclitus’ attributed aphorism, you can never really go into the same farm twice. Yet farms are, arguably, amongst the (...)
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  31.  2
    The Sacred and the Sovereign: Religion and International Politics.Donald M. Braxton - 2005 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 25 (1):263-265.
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  32.  13
    Neither Beast nor Sovereign.Cary Wolfe - 2019 - Environmental Philosophy 16 (1):201-221.
    This essay combines deconstruction and systems theory to rethink the question of ecological poetics in the work of Wallace Stevens, and in particular some of his most important poems that focus on birds and bird song. Ecocriticism has typically approached literature in general and poetry in particular in terms of its representation of nature. This essay argues for a non-representationalist ecopoetics that derives from replacing the concept of “nature” with the systems theory concept of “environment”. This theoretical shift allows us, (...)
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  33.  14
    Neither Beast nor Sovereign.Cary Wolfe - 2019 - Environmental Philosophy 16 (1):201-221.
    This essay combines deconstruction (chiefly the later work of Jacques Derrida) and systems theory (both social and biological systems theory) to rethink the question of ecological poetics in the work of Wallace Stevens, and in particular some of his most important poems that focus on birds and bird song. Ecocriticism has typically approached literature in general and poetry in particular in terms of its representation of nature. This essay argues for a non-representationalist ecopoetics that derives from replacing the concept of (...)
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  34. Birds, beasts and the Dao.David E. Cooper - 2014 - The Philosophers' Magazine 65:84-90.
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  35.  3
    Hyper-Sovereignty and Community.Jeffrey D. Gower - 2024 - Angelaki 29 (1):71-84.
    The article retraces three important steps along the path of Derrida’s Heidegger interpretation in The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume II. Readings of The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics, Introduction to Metaphysics, and “The Onto-Theo-Logical Constitution of Metaphysics” complement and further develop Derrida’s deconstruction of Heidegger, which revolves around the term “Walten” and its role in the world-formation that makes community possible. The analysis of what Derrida calls the hyper-sovereignty of Walten reveals an ethico-political ambiguity in Heidegger’s texts. On (...)
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  36.  36
    The Beast of the Closet: Homosociality and the Pathology of Manhood.David Van Leer - 1989 - Critical Inquiry 15 (3):587-605.
    [Eve] Sedgwick examines from an explicitly feminist, implicitly Marxist perspective the relation of homosexuality to more general social bonds between members of the same sex . She argues that the similarity between homosocial desire and homosexuality lies at the root of much homophobia. Moreover, she sees this tension as misogynist to the extent that battles fought over patriarchy within the homosocial world automatically exclude women from that patriarchal power. Thus she places homosexuality and its attendant homophobia within a wider dynamic (...)
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  37.  53
    Humor: The Beauty and the Beast.Glenn A. Hartz & Ralph Hunt - 1991 - American Philosophical Quarterly 28 (4):299 - 309.
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  38.  6
    The Beauty and the Erotic Binding of the Beast.Andrei Oisteanu - 1996 - Dialogue and Universalism 6 (5):95-106.
    I came to the subject by attempting to reinterpret the well-known legend of the labyrinth and the status of its main characters: Theseus, Ariadne, Dedalus and the Minotaur. The conflict between the two invincible entities is a reminiscence, degraded by literaturisation of the first conflict - in the 'zero moment' of the mythical history of the Universe - between the principle of the Cosmos and the principle of the Chaos. From a hermeneutical perspective, the god's overcoming of the monster is (...)
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  39.  28
    The Desire for the Sovereign and the Logic of Reciprocity in the Family of Nations.Lydia H. Liu - 1999 - Diacritics 29 (4):150-177.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 29.4 (1999) 150-177 [Access article in PDF] The Desire for the Sovereign and the Logic of Reciprocity in the Family of Nations Lydia H. Liu It may sound like a truism that the modern nation cannot imagine itself except in sovereign terms. But what is this truism saying or, rather, withholding from us? When Benedict Anderson wrote his influential study of nationalism in 1983, he circumscribed (...)
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  40.  19
    Subjectivity and sovereignty: The Cartesian dimension of the position of the sovereign in Hobbes' "Leviathan".Predrag Milidrag - 2004 - Filozofija I Društvo 2004 (24):231-241.
    Although Hobbes' understanding of the sovereign's position in a state and Descartes' understanding of God arose completely independently from each other, there is a strong structural similarity between the two. After elaborating on this point, the author demonstrates the metaphysical foundation of Hobbes' conception of the sovereign. The main thesis of the paper is that the subjectivity of sovereign is not the so-called 'empirical' subjectivity of early modern philosophy, but that it is equivalent to God's subjectivity, as (...)
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  41.  17
    "The Town Is Beastly and the Weather Was Vile": Bertrand Russell in Chicago, 1938-9.Gary M. Slezak & Donald W. Jackanicz - 1977 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 1:4-20.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Photo-credit to Chicago Sun-Times and James Mescall. 4 "The town is beastly and the weather was vile": Bertrand Russell in Chicago, 1938-1939 Visiting Chicago in 1867, Lord Amberley offered his wife an appreciation of the city: "The country around Chicago is flat and ugly; the town itself has good buildings but has a rough unfinished appearance which does not contribute to its attractions."l While Bertrand Russell is known to (...)
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  42.  21
    Vulnerability and the Sovereign Individual: Nussbaum and Nietzsche on the role of agency and vulnerability in personhood.Sharli A. Paphitis - 2013 - South African Journal of Philosophy 32 (2):123-136.
    In her paper Pity and Mercy: Nietzsche’s Stoicism, Martha Nussbaum argues that Nietzsche’s philosophical project can be seen in part as an attempt to ‘bring about a revival of Stoic values of self-command and self-transformation’. She argues that, to his detriment, Nietzsche’s ‘Sovereign Individual’ epitomises a kind of stoic ideal of inner strength and self-sufficiency that ‘goes beyond Stoicism’ in its valorisation of radical self emancipation from the contingencies of life and from our own human vulnerability. Nussbaum thus urges (...)
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  43.  20
    A Strange Proximity: On the Notion of Walten in Derrida and Heidegger.Daniela Vallega-Neu - 2022 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (2):369-387.
    This article juxtaposes Derrida’s last seminar, The Beast and the Sovereign with Heidegger’s The Event in order to question Derrida’s reading of the notion of Walten in Heidegger’s texts in relation to the themes of sov­ereignty and death. It draws out different senses of Walten depending on whether Heidegger thinks Greek φύσις or the other beginning and it points out the importance of constancy for the notion of Walten. In each case Walten shatters in relation to death or (...)
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  44.  14
    The puzzle of the sovereign’s smile and the inner complexity of Hobbes’s theory of authorisation.Eva Helene Odzuck - forthcoming - History of European Ideas.
    Hobbes’s theory of authorisation poses numerous puzzles to scholars. The weightiest of these conundrums is a supposed contradiction between chapter 17 of Leviathan, that calls for unconditional submission to the sovereign, and chapter 21, that defends the liberties of the subject. This article offers a fresh perspective on the theory’s consistency, function and addressees. While existing research doubts the theory’s consistency, focuses on its immunisation function and on the subjects as the theory’s main addresses, the paper argues that Hobbes’s (...)
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  45. The Schoolboys' Memoria Technica for the Dates of the Sovereigns of England, and of the Principal Events in English History.James Collier - 1872
  46.  22
    The Poetic Axis of Ethics.Kelly Oliver - 2014 - Derrida Today 7 (2):121-136.
    In The Poetic Axis of Ethics, Kelly Oliver argues that in Derrida's The Beast and the Sovereign Volume II, a line of poetry from Celan becomes the axis around which Derrida's analysis of world, death, and ethics revolves: ‘Die Welt ist fort, ich muß dich tragen’ [The world is far away, I must carry you]. Oliver maintains that the Celan fragment, which is repeated in nearly every session, is not only the axis around which Derrida binds the unlikely (...)
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  47.  15
    "The Town Is Beastly and the Weather Was Vile": Bertrand Russell in Chicago, 1938-9.M. Slezak Gary & W. Jackanicz Donald - 2014 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies.
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  48.  79
    Introduction: The Players and the Game of Sovereign Debt.Barry Herman - 2007 - Ethics and International Affairs 21 (1):9-39.
    This essay characterizes the main actors and how they operate during a buildup of government foreign debt.
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  49.  24
    Willing and Deciding: Hegel on Irony, Evil, and the Sovereign Exception.Andrew Norris - 2007 - Diacritics 37 (2/3):135-156.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Willing and DecidingHegel on Irony, Evil, and the Sovereign ExceptionAndrew NorrisIf political decisionism is the claim that the most important political decisions cannot be regulated by rational norms and instead require a confrontation with the exception, Carl Schmitt remains its most notorious advocate. While Schmitt distanced himself from decisionism when he joined the Nazi party in the 1930s, his critics insist that his role in the events leading (...)
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  50.  16
    Reading-Idioms ( de la poussance).Peggy Kamuf - 2023 - Derrida Today 16 (1):36-46.
    This essay traces the figure of the ‘leap’ in the second year of Derrida’s Beast and the Sovereign seminar, where it crosses in a significant way the central concern with Walten in Heidegger’s thought. A key question for the reading is about the impulse, drive or push behind all these leaps. Precipitated out is a notion that names what is neither subject nor object, action nor passion, but de la poussance, a noun forged on the model of those (...)
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