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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Philosophy
Translating, Repeating, Naming: Foucault, Derrida And The Genealogy Of Morals, Gary Shapiro
Translating, Repeating, Naming: Foucault, Derrida And The Genealogy Of Morals, Gary Shapiro
Philosophy Faculty Publications
Two cautions or warnings (at least) must be heeded in the attempt to do justice to Nietzsche's project of a genealogy of morals in the text that bears that name. While the Genealogy is often regarded as the most straightforward and continuous of Nietzsche's books, he tells us in Ecce Homo that its three essays are "perhaps uncannier than anything else written so far in regard to expression, intention, and the art of surprise.” If we should think ourselves successful in penetrating to these uncanny secrets and saying what Nietzsche's text means, once and for all, we would then have …
[Introduction To] After The Future: Postmodern Times And Places, Gary Shapiro
[Introduction To] After The Future: Postmodern Times And Places, Gary Shapiro
Bookshelf
This book brings together diverse aspects of postmodernism by philosophers, literary critics, historians of architecture, and sociologists. It addresses the nature of postmodernism in painting, architecture, and the performing arts, and explores the social and political implications of postmodern theories of culture.
The book raises the question of whether postmodernism is to be seen as one more epoch or period within a succession of eras, or as a challenge to the modernist practice of periodization itself.
The nature of the subject and of subjectivity is explored in order to resituate and contextualize the autonomous subject of the modern literary traditions. …
The "L-Word": A Short History Of Liberalism, Terence Ball, Richard Dagger
The "L-Word": A Short History Of Liberalism, Terence Ball, Richard Dagger
Political Science Faculty Publications
Hence the question: Are these good or bad times for liberalism? To answer, we shall need a broader perspective than a survey of contemporary developments can provide. We shall need to look back, that is, to see what liberalism was in order to understand what it has become. Only then can we assess its current condition and prospects-and appreciate how politics in the United States is largely an intramural debate between different wings of liberalism.
Foscolo, Dante And The Papacy, Peter Iver Kaufman
Foscolo, Dante And The Papacy, Peter Iver Kaufman
Jepson School of Leadership Studies articles, book chapters and other publications
Of the many interpretations of cantos and characters in Dante's Divine Comedy, few rival the wordplay in Gabriele Rossetti's commentary (1826-27). None that I know rivals its imaginative recreation of fourteenth-century literary and political history. According to Rossetti, Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio and a nest of Cathari were members of an underground network. Dissident poets, politicians, and church reformers therein camouflaged their attacks against the papacy to prevent detection and reprisal.