From Agamben to Zizek: Contemporary Critical TheoristsJon Simons Edinburgh University Press, 2010 M09 10 - 288 pages In these 15 taster essays you will discover the key concepts and critical approaches of the theorists who have had the most significant impact on the humanities since 1990. On completing each chapter, you will find suggestions for further reading so that you can find out more and start applying the ideas in question. In addition to chapters on individuals such as Badiou, Ranciere and Spivak, there are chapters on Laclau and Mouffe, and a chapter on Green critical theorists. |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 45
Page 31
... Marxist appeal for a unity of theory and practice, because – for better or worse – the unity of acting and thinking is the twentieth- century achievement. Contrary to the received view of a century distorted by ideological passion ...
... Marxist appeal for a unity of theory and practice, because – for better or worse – the unity of acting and thinking is the twentieth- century achievement. Contrary to the received view of a century distorted by ideological passion ...
Page 48
... marxist. Capital closes, infamously, with the double ending of Chapters 32 and 33. (Bauman was to introduce his own double ending, modern and postmodern, in Legislators and Interpreters). Colonisation, as Marx and Engels had anticipated ...
... marxist. Capital closes, infamously, with the double ending of Chapters 32 and 33. (Bauman was to introduce his own double ending, modern and postmodern, in Legislators and Interpreters). Colonisation, as Marx and Engels had anticipated ...
Page 49
... marxist for a putatively marxist regime, so he and his family were harassed and then shown the door, the final exit of the one way visa out of Warsaw via Jerusalem. He had been out before, in moments of authorised scholarly pursuit, not ...
... marxist for a putatively marxist regime, so he and his family were harassed and then shown the door, the final exit of the one way visa out of Warsaw via Jerusalem. He had been out before, in moments of authorised scholarly pursuit, not ...
Page 50
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Page 93
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Contents
1 | |
14 | |
29 | |
45 | |
4 Homi K Bhabha 1949 | 60 |
5 Judith Butler 1956 | 77 |
6 Cornelius Castoriadis 192297 | 93 |
7 Green Critical Theorists | 110 |
10 Bruno Latour 1947 | 161 |
11 Antonio Negri 1933 | 177 |
12 Jacques Rancière 1940 | 194 |
13 Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak 1942 | 210 |
14 Paul Virilio 1932 | 227 |
15 Slavoj Žižek 1949 | 243 |
Names index | 259 |
Subject index | 263 |
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Common terms and phrases
acts aesthetics Agamben analysis animal appear approach argues Badiou Bauman become Bhabha body Butler calls capital Castoriadis century challenge claims colonial concept concern contemporary context critical theory critique cultural democracy Derrida discourse effect emergence essays ethical event example existence feminist figure follows gender global Haraway historical human Ibid idea identity ideology imagination important institutions intellectual Italy knowledge Laclau language Latour liberal living London Marx Marxist material meaning movement nature Negri networks never notion object particular Paul performativity philosophy political position possibility practices present production question radical Rancière reading Reason refers regime relation sense social society specific speech Spivak structure studies subaltern suggests theoretical theorists thinking thought tion trans truth turn understanding University Press Virilio volume Western writing York Žižek