Results for 'communitas'

71 found
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  1.  26
    Communitas and the problem of women.Anne O'Byrne - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (3):125-138.
    From its earliest beginnings, political thought has grappled with the problem of those who both do and do not belong to the city, those who cannot be exactly included or excluded, that is to say, with the problem of difference. Most often this emerges first as the problem of what to do with women. Communitas is an intense engagement with central figures in the history of political thought – Augustine, Hobbes, Rousseau – but also a remarkably efficient avoidance of (...)
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  2. Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community.Roberto Esposito - 2009 - Stanford University Press.
    Introduction : nothing in common -- Fear -- Guilt -- Law -- Ecstasy -- Experience -- Appendix : nihilism and community.
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  3.  12
    Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community.Timothy Campbell (ed.) - 2009 - Stanford University Press.
    No theme has been more central to international philosophical debates than that of community: from American communitarianism to Habermas's ethic of communication to the French deconstruction of community in the work of Derrida and Nancy. Nevertheless, in none of these cases has the concept been examined from the perspective of community's original etymological meaning: _cum munus_. In _Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community_, Roberto Esposito does just that through an original counter-history of political philosophy that takes up not only (...)
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  4.  21
    HEGEL ON COMMUNITAS an unexplored relationship between hegel and esposito.María del Rosario Acosta López - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (3):13-31.
    In Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community, Roberto Esposito develops a destructionist reading of political philosophy, interested in tracing modernity's attempt to constitute the political as a radical negation of our exposure to others. If the task of contemporary political thinking is to interrupt the myth of the common, without falling back completely into the negative and self-destructive power of immunization, political philosophy must be confronted with itself, searching within itself for the traces and points of departure – (...)
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  5.  3
    Communitas, Ritual, and Sustainability in Peter Senge’s Presence: Human Purpose and the Field of the Future.Shawn T. Collins - 2005 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 25 (6):491-496.
    Presence suggests that adapting the experiences of leading innovators may address a nightmare scenario of environmental destruction, a growing divide between the rich and poor, and escalating violence around the world. Innovation occurs by transforming sensing to identify limitations in existing solution sets, transforming perception to envision an entire whole, and transforming action to realize the future seeking to emerge from the whole. This U sequence follows the rite-of-passage phases of separation, liminality, and reincorporation documented by Victor Turner. By ending (...)
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  6.  22
    Communitas: belonging and the order of being.James Greenaway - 2018 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 79 (1-2):194-212.
    Human existence is intrinsically community-oriented. Persons find themselves as responsible in community. This is a classical and Christian insight that is supported by significant contemporary philosophers such as Gabriel Marcel and Emmanuel Levinas. This article makes the claim that to thrive as a person is to belong; indeed, that it is the experience of belonging that satisfies the human need for meaning, value, and purpose. The article proceeds by considering the term ‘community.’ In itself, ‘community’ is a common sense term. (...)
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  7.  21
    Communitas – Immunitas – Bíos: Roberto Espositos Politik der Gemeinschaft.Robin Celikates - 2008 - In Claas Morgenroth & Janine Böckelmann (eds.), Politik der Gemeinschaft: Zur Konstitution des Politischen in der Gegenwart. Transcript Verlag. pp. 49-67.
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  8.  22
    Communitas/Immunitas: a releitura de Roberto Esposito da biopolítica.Marcos Nalli - 2013 - Revista de Filosofia Aurora 25 (37):79.
    O objetivo deste artigo é apresentar as principais ideias do filósofo político italiano Roberto Esposito, mostrando como ele relê a biopolítica moderna a partir das categorias conceituais de “comunidade” e “sistema imunitário”. Procuraremos demonstrar como Esposito concebe cada um desses conceitos e como os articula de modo a demonstrar os traços totalitários que podem apresentar, identificando uma aparente limitação de sua abordagem para, em seguida, esboçar uma possível resposta de Esposito, na medida em que retoma a urgência de se pensar (...)
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  9.  4
    Communitas: The Play of Saints in Late Medieval and Tudor England.Lawrence M. Clopper - 1992 - Mediaevalia 18:81-109.
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  10.  18
    Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community.Mitchell Cohen - 2012 - Common Knowledge 18 (2):377-378.
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  11. Communitas as the “essential We”: The Possibility of Dialogical Relationships in a Community.N. S. Vorobyeva - 2019 - Sociology of Power 31 (4):155-184.
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  12.  8
    Theorizing disaster communitas.Steve Matthewman & Shinya Uekusa - 2021 - Theory and Society 50 (6):965-984.
    Disaster scholars have long complained that their field is theory light: they are much better at doing and saying than analyzing. The paucity of theory doubtless reflects an understandable focus on case studies and practical solutions. Yet this works against big picture thinking. Consequently, both our comprehension of social suffering and our ability to mitigate it are fragmented. Communitas is exemplary here. This refers to the improvisational acts of mutual help, collective feeling and utopian desires that emerge in the (...)
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  13.  6
    Welsh Communitas as Ideological Practice.Carol Trosset - 1988 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 16 (2):167-180.
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  14. Elections as communitas.Mukulika Banerjee - 2011 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 78 (1):75-98.
    This paper explains why elections are popular in India and why voter turnouts have remained stable. The evidence presented here shows that voters consider the electoral process itself as important, as this allows for the performative expression of the core ideals of democracy—citizenship, duty and rights, equality, cooperation, imagination of a common good-values that are otherwise wholly missing from polity the rest of the time. It is precisely because of its absence in daily life that people feel the urge to (...)
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  15.  11
    Civitatum Communitas. Studies on European Towns and Cities. [REVIEW]Rainer Wohlfeil - 1987 - Philosophy and History 20 (1):63-68.
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  16.  5
    O díptico communitas / immunitas e o pensamento afirmativo.Fernando Gigante Ferraz - 2018 - Griot : Revista de Filosofia 17 (1):22-32.
    O texto tem como objetivo apresentar a categoria de “biopolítica afirmativa” de Roberto Esposito. Para tanto, na primeira parte discute-se rapidamente o que se convencionou chamar de “a diferença italiana”. O segundo tópico do texto discute o significado de comunidade a partir do seu étimo originário munus. Na seção seguinte aborda-se o “dispositivo imunitário” onipresente em nossas sociedades. A partir dessas considerações pode-se, na última parte, discutir o problema central proposto, isto é, a biopolítica afirmativa.
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  17.  6
    Co-authoring communitas : Resistance as counter-Valence in John kinsella’s shared texts.Dan Disney - 2021 - Angelaki 26 (2):69-80.
    John Kinsella remains Australia’s most militant, morally cognizant naysayer, and his oeuvre is an archive of precepts running counter to master narratives of place. This essay re-reads Benjamin’s notion of the artist as cultural producer against the grain of Esposito’s etymological excavations of “community,” and frames Kinsella’s steady output of co-authored books as not only a mode of nomadic munificence but no less than a kind of formative guerrilla poetics. Pairing with poets, rock stars, others to extend his anti-capitalist project, (...)
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  18.  18
    Pilgerfahrten als Feier von communitas und als Arena.Günther Schlee & Krisztina Kehl-Bodrogi - 2007 - Zeitschrift für Religionswissenschaft 15 (2):155-178.
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  19.  26
    Communitas: The Anthropology of Collective Joy, Edith Turner. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2012. 258 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐230‐33908‐8, $28. [REVIEW]Hillary S. Webb - 2013 - Anthropology of Consciousness 24 (1):82-84.
  20.  10
    Discussione su "Communitas" di Roberto Esposito.Furio Ferraresi, Simona Forti & Geminello Preterossi - 1999 - Iride: Filosofia e Discussione Pubblica 12 (2):413-426.
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  21.  7
    Mundus, Pax, communitas: On different meanings of the world-concept in Russian language.Alexander Frolov - 2018 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 7 (2):297-311.
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  22.  22
    The Inner Limits of Communitas: A Covert Dimension of Pilgrimage Experience.Yoram Bilu - 1988 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 16 (3):302-325.
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  23.  9
    Middle Class Communitas: The Fraternal Order of Badgers.Noel J. Chrisman - 1974 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 2 (4):356-376.
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  24.  20
    Roberto Esposito , Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community . Reviewed by.Alexander D. Barder - 2011 - Philosophy in Review 31 (1):29-32.
  25.  20
    Fields of networked mind: Ritual consciousness and the factor of communitas in networked rites of compassion.Lila Moore - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (3):331-339.
    Ritual consciousness is an altered state of consciousness that transpires beyond the boundaries of the known and gives rise to a duration referred to as time out of time. This extraordinary duration encompasses three interrelated factors: digital as opposed to analogue conduct of time, tempo and communitas. Under specific formal conditions, these factors may emerge in the context of networked rituals and outside their traditional and earthbound religious or spiritual settings. In this article, the three factors are analysed in (...)
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  26. P. Quattrocchi, Communità Religiosa e Società Civile nel Pensiero di Kant. [REVIEW]K. Oedingen - 1977 - Kant Studien 68 (3):376.
  27. Writing a Way Home: Liminality, Magical Realism, and the Building of a Biotic Communitas in Linda Hogan's Solar Storms and People of the Whale.Bénédicte Meillon - 2020 - In Bénédicte Meillon (ed.), Dwellings of Enchantment: Writing and Reenchanting the Earth. Lanham, Maryland: Ecocritical Theory and Practice.
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  28. pp., pb. $37.00. Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community, Roberto Esposito. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2010, iv+ 175 pp., pb. $22.95. Memory: A Philosophical Study, Sven Bernecker. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010, viii+ 276 pp.,£ 35.00. [REVIEW]Denis Vernant Véridicté - 2010 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 53 (3):307.
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  29.  2
    --És : StruktúRa és Communitas.Ferenc Tallár - 2006 - Budapest: L'Harmattan.
  30.  12
    Der Kollektivbegriff in der Ethnologie. Ethnie, Communitas und Kollektive Identität.Jürg Wassmannn, Anita Galuschek & Nora Rohstock - 2015 - Zeitschrift Für Kultur- Und Kollektivwissenschaft 1 (1):73-88.
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  31.  49
    Il dono della vita tra communitas e immunitas.Roberto Esposito - 2004 - Idee 55:31-43.
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  32.  20
    Wśród ostatnich lektur [recenzja] Valori, Scienza e Transcendenza, vol. secondo: Un dibatto sulla dimensione etica e religiosa nella communita scientifica internazionale, 1990. A. Lightman, R. Brawer, Origins - The Lives and Worlds of Modern Cosmologist. [REVIEW]Michał Heller - 1992 - Zagadnienia Filozoficzne W Nauce 14.
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  33.  12
    A qualitative investigation of hospital visitors’ experiences using the analytic lens of liminality: Informing nursing practice and policy.Janet Underwood & Christine Rhodes - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (3):e12239.
    This research aimed to inform nursing practice and policy by identifying satisfying and problematic experiences of hospital visitors during the hospitalisation episode of a significant other. An extensive contextual review revealed that healthcare systems in advanced economies face multiple pressures and that in England, the government leaves the determination of hospital visiting rules to individual trusts. The analytic lens of liminality provides rich interpretations of visitors’ accounts and demonstrates the importance to visitors of structure (hospital rules and systems) and (...) (social bonding among liminal personae). Supportive hospital structures reduce the challenges of liminality and increase satisfaction. The data further suggest an extension to current understandings of liminality. Strong structure and successful communitas permit a safe exit from liminality after the hospitalisation episode for visitors with a close emotional bond with the patient. (shrink)
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  34.  17
    La comunidad ortopédica. Por una crítica de patologías desde el paradigma inmunológico.Borja García Ferrer - 2015 - Isegoría 52:331-348.
    Este trabajo explota el potencial hermenéutico de la dialéctica espositeana communitas/immunitas para indagar las raíces ontológicas del nuevo malestar en la cultura a tenor de los efectos antropológicos de la «hiperestimulación semiótica», así como sus expresiones mórbidas en la praxis sociopolítica. Desde esta perspectiva, analizamos los devaneos posmodernos de la identidad personal para determinar que, en su caso, el síndrome inmunitario del presente es inseparable del apogeo consumista, hasta el punto que constituye un epifenómeno de la fase posindustrial del (...)
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  35.  23
    The Spirituality of Africa: The First Encounter.Edith Turner - 2015 - Anthropology of Consciousness 26 (2):121-131.
    The article shows some moving occasions during the first fieldwork of Victor Turner and myself in Africa during the 1950s. For instance, the Ndembu people would always give great welcomes to their returning kin after long absences. The scenes are etched on my mind as a blueprint for all welcomes. On their friends return, the villagers would immediately gather and sing the simple song, “You're back, you're back!” Why did the people so much value each other? In this village I (...)
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  36.  5
    Jesus: The infected healer and infectious community – Liminality and creative rituals in the Jesus community in view of COVID-19.Zorodzai Dube - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (1):6.
    Using theories in medical anthropology, especially the ideas inspired by Hector Avalos and George Foster, the study explains three activities associated with the early Christian healthcare system: (1) touching infectious people, (2) hospitality towards possibly infectious people and (3) the practice of itinerary evangelism as an activity that earned Christianity the dubious role of being a carrier of infectious diseases. Discussed alongside the issues associated with the advent of COVID-19, the study aims at (1) reflecting that early Christian healthcare system, (...)
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  37.  14
    Off the pitch: semiotics of liminality between space and play.Ruggero Ragonese - 2022 - Semiotica 2022 (248):169-185.
    Playing fields are “spaces where the communitas suspends its everyday life and structures” and “The internal logic of sporting games is connected to values from the social context”, Playing fields: Power, practice, and passion in sport, 127–144. Reno: University of Nevada Press). But what about the space in between? What kind of semiotics organisation can be detected in the membrane between player and liminal space where spectators are not allowed yet specific characters needed to carry out an event? We (...)
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  38.  36
    Roberto Esposito’s ‘Affirmative Biopolitics’ and the Gift.Thomas F. Tierney - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (2):53-76.
    This article develops the affirmative biopolitics that Roberto Esposito intimates in his trilogy – Communitas, Immunitas and Bı´os. The key to this affirmative biopolitics lies in the relationship between the munus, a form of gift that is the root of communitas and immunitas, and the gift discourse that developed throughout the 20th century. The article expands upon Esposito’s interpretation of four theoretical sources that are crucial to his biopolitical perspective: Mauss and the gift-exchange tradition; Hobbes’s social contract theory, (...)
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  39.  7
    Beyond the Person: Roberto Esposito and the Body as ‘Common Good’.Luca Serafini - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (7-8):215-228.
    In this review of Persons and Things, recently translated into English and published by Polity Press, we discuss how this text investigates some of the most important themes of Roberto Esposito’s thought. Specifically, the book continues the process of constructing an idea of community intended as lack, gift and impropriety that the Italian philosopher has been developing since the publication of Communitas. In this case, it is the notion of body that demolishes the metaphysical apparatus that has conditioned the (...)
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  40.  36
    The ethics of community Nancy, Blanchot, Esposito.Kristin Hole - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (3):103-118.
    This paper analyzes the varying conceptions of ethics underpinning the accounts of community in Blanchot, Nancy, and Esposito. A focus on ethics brings into relief points of divergence amongst accounts of community that otherwise overlap and share in many significant ways. Furthermore, it provides a basis to better assess Esposito's contribution. I focus on the concepts of difference and transcendence and the figure of the lovers, a shared topos in Nancy and Blanchot, to demonstrate these subtle variations. In turning to (...)
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  41.  28
    Roberto Esposito's political philosophy of the gift.Lorna Weir - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (3):155-167.
    Roberto Esposito has extended the deconstructive theory of the gift into political philosophy, theorizing the gift as the transcendental form of political obligation. In Esposito's philosophy of communitas, the munus consists of the single obligation to give, a logic of donors without receivers, yet it simultaneously establishes relations of reciprocity, mutuality, debt and gratitude. I argue that that indebtedness and reciprocity are not logically possible in a gift system where donors are bound by the single obligation to give, as (...)
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  42.  10
    Entre peregrinação, turismo e liminaridade: a busca por lugares.Júlio Cézar Adam - 2018 - Horizonte 16 (49):66-87.
    This article reflects on the anthropological aspect of the pilgrimage, the human journey, as a metaphor for life, as a way of relating and understanding religion, spirituality, life itself and tourism as forms of pilgrimage. The pilgrimages of the Christian tradition will be analyzed, seeking to understand them of the anthropology of Victor Turner, analyzing the pilgrimage as a state of liminality and liminoid. Concretely we will look at the case of the Romarias da Terra in Brazil, as an example (...)
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  43.  2
    „Roušky s TULkou“: Věda a etika v liminalitě.Jana Jetmarová & Michal Trčka - 2022 - Teorie Vědy / Theory of Science 44 (2):217-251.
    The text presents the results of a qualitative study focused on the issue of using nanomaterials in the extraordinary circumstances linked to the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly referring to the “Roušky s TULkou” initiative. Within several weeks, this initiative managed to launch the production of highly efficient nanofiber filters using the original AC Electrospinning technology on an industrial scale. The goal of the research was to analyse both the regional experience and the value-based challenges, conflicts and ethical dilemmas posed by an (...)
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  44.  37
    Spinoza and the biopolitical roots of modernity.Peter Gratton - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (3):91-102.
    Much has been written about biopolitical sovereignty in the wake of Agamben's work, which relies, at least in the first volume of Homo Sacer, on Carl Schmitt's transcendental account of sovereignty. This article argues, however, that Foucault and Arendt rightly identify what Derrida once called the “changing shape and place of sovereignty” in modernity, which for them is horizontal and disseminated within a presupposed nation. For this reason, we will look to the source of modern philosophical immanentism, Spinoza, to show (...)
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  45. The Paradox of Civil Society in the Structure of Hegel’s Views of Sittlichkeit.Sholomo Avineri - 1986 - Philosophy and Theology 1 (2):157-172.
    The way in which much of the conventional interpretation has tried to describe the structure of Hegel’s civil society is inaccurate and one-dimensional. To Hegel civil society is not just the economic marketplace, where every individual tries to maximize his or her enlightened self-interest: side by side with the elements of universal strife and unending clash which are of the nature of civil society, there is another element which strongly limits and inhibits self-interest and transcendswhat would otherwise be a universal (...)
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  46.  22
    Techno-spiritual horizons: Compassionate networked art forms and noetic fields of cyborg body and consciousness.Lila Moore - 2017 - Technoetic Arts 15 (3):325-339.
    The article proposes that the modern notion of the spiritual in art, which was theorized at the beginning of the twentieth century, although remains pivotal to the discourse of art and the spiritual, has radically shifted as a result of changing attitudes to the body–mind relations instigated by popular trends of contemporary spiritualities. This cultural tendency is demonstrated by the analysis of the networked art form of Moon Ribas, e.g., dance with earthquakes. Ribas performs a cyborg body and consciousness that, (...)
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  47.  3
    The Intellectual Legacy of Victor and Edith Turner.Frank A. Salamone & Marjorie M. Snipes (eds.) - 2018 - Lexington Books.
    Contributors to this collection examine the Turners’ most important theoretical contributions to anthropology, from their work on pilgrimages, liminality, and communitas to insights from their fieldwork. They illustrate the Turners’ enduring theoretical contributions and their profound effects on the anthropological perspective.
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  48.  81
    Community, immunity, biopolitics.Roberto Esposito & Zakiya Hanafi - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (3):83-90.
    In this article, Roberto Esposito lays out the genealogical pathways linking the three major concepts around which his most recent work has wound its way: community, immunity, and biopolitics. Although immunity is necessary to the preservation of our life, when driven beyond a certain threshold it forces life into a sort of cage where not only our freedom gets lost but also the very meaning of our existence – that opening of existence outside itself that takes the name of (...). A hermeneutics informed by immunity can allow the category of community to regain a new political significance, without ending up in a substantialist metaphysics. This task is dictated by the urgent need for an affirmative biopolitics – a horizon of meaning – in which life would no longer be the object but somehow the subject of politics. But what sort of shape would this take? Where would we trace its symptoms? And with what objectives? A preliminary answer focuses on breaking the vise grip between public and private that threatens to crush the common, by seeking instead to expand the space of the common, in the fight, for example, against the planned privatization of water and the battle over energy sources. (shrink)
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  49.  11
    Performance as a Communicative Process.Mariia Lihus - 2018 - Visnyk of the Lviv University Series Philosophical Sciences 20 (20):119.
    The article deals with the examination of performance as a social event and a communicative process from the position of the constitutional meta-model of communication. Performance is viewed as a form of communication based on the horizontal relation of its participants because of the informational and symbolical exchange between the performers and audience and its transformative potential. Much attention is paid to the analysis of the transformative power of performance through the lens of notion of liminality. The author draws a (...)
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  50.  9
    Bíos: Biopolitics and Philosophy.Timothy Campbell (ed.) - 2008 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Roberto Esposito is one of the most prolific and important exponents of contemporary Italian political theory. Bíos -his first book to be translated into English-builds on two decades of highly regarded thought, including his thesis that the modern individual-with all of its civil and political rights as well as its moral powers-is an attempt to attain immunity from the contagion of the extraindividual, namely, the community. In Bíos, Esposito applies such a paradigm of immunization to the analysis of the radical (...)
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