Works by Saunders, Rebecca (exact spelling)

5 found
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  1.  31
    Keeping a Distance: heidegger and derrida on foreignness and friends.Rebecca Saunders - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (2):35-49.
    Distance is central to both Heidegger’s depiction of being-in-the-world and Derrida’s theorization of the culture of friendship. It is equally fundamental to the structure of language and, I argue, to the concept of the foreign. This essay brings together these theories of distance and demonstrates the ways they act on and through each other, the role that linguistic distance plays in constructing both foreigners and friends, and the permeable semantic boundaries that the concept of distance shares with movement, strangeness, instability, (...)
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  2. Susceptibility and Resilience, a Fig Tree and a Scream.Rebecca Saunders - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):68.
    Analyzing two key figures in Elif Shafak’s novel The Island of Missing Trees—a schoolgirl’s scream and a narrating fig tree—this essay analyzes the intersection between susceptibility and resilience, particularly as these terms are developed in psychology, trauma studies, and ecology. I argue that the novel’s resonant scream critiques the discourse of psychological resilience on multiple counts: its inadequacy as a response to complex trauma, its focus on autonomous individuals, its assumption that responsibility for resilience rests on victims rather than perpetrators (...)
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  3.  7
    The Concept of the Foreign: An Interdisciplinary Dialogue.Rebecca Saunders (ed.) - 2002 - Lexington Books.
    Drawing out literal and metaphorical meanings of 'foreignness' this wide-ranging volume offers much to scholars of postcolonial, gender, and cultural studies seeking new approaches to the study of alterity.
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  4.  17
    Book review: T. Denean sharpley-Whiting. Black Venus: Sexualized savages, primal fears, and primitive narratives in French. Durham, N.c.: Duke university press, 1999. [REVIEW]Rebecca Saunders - 2001 - Hypatia 16 (3):169-172.
  5.  12
    Book review: T. Denean sharpley-Whiting. Black Venus: Sexualized savages, primal fears, and primitive narratives in French. Durham, N.c.: Duke university press, 1999. [REVIEW]Rebecca Saunders - 2001 - Hypatia 16 (3):169-172.
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