Works by Vogt, Erik (exact spelling)

6 found
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  1. S/citing the camp.Erik Vogt - 2005 - In Andrew Norris (ed.), Politics, metaphysics, and death: essays on Giorgio Agamben's Homo sacer. Durham: Duke University Press.
  2.  5
    Adorno and the Concept of Genocide.Ryan Crawford & Erik Vogt (eds.) - 2016 - Boston: Brill | Rodopi.
    In _Adorno and the Concept of Genocide_ an international group of scholars examine the philosophical, aesthetic and political legacy of the Frankfurt School’s leading authority on life ‘after Auschwitz.’.
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  3. Ethik des einzelnen Allgemeinen.Erik Vogt - 2007 - In Klaus Dethloff & Peter Kampits (eds.), Humane Existenz: Reflexionen zur Ethik in einer pluralistischen Gesellschaft. Berlin: Parerga.
     
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  4.  30
    Exception in Žižek's Thought.Erik Vogt - 2007 - Diacritics 37 (2/3):61-77.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Exception in Žižek’s ThoughtErik Vogt (bio)One cannot fail to be struck by the repeated occurrences and invocations of some logic of exception as well as by the proliferation of examples or stand-ins for exceptional positions (“Jew”; “woman”; “class struggle”) or exceptional collectives (“proletariat”; “slum dwellers”) in many of Slavoj Žižek’s writings. The significance of thinking exception is evident not only in Žižek’s powerful reconceptualization of (a supposedly outdated) ideology (...)
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  5.  42
    Sartre/Foucault: On resistance.Erik Vogt - 1997 - The European Legacy 2 (4):708-714.
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  6. Technoscience, Neuroscience, and the Subject of Politics.Erik Vogt - 2010 - The European Legacy 15 (6):709-720.
    Although narrative models have been employed for quite some time in historiography, in sociology, and in certain psychoanalytic theories, the tendency towards narrativization has also become more dominant in reference to the positive sciences. This article presents two postmodern versions of the narrative dissolution of certain modern scientific-metaphysical concepts in the wake of the establishment of technoscience and neuroscience: Vattimo's Heideggerian account of technoscience as immanent pluralization of worlds, and Dennett's cognitivist account of the emergence of the plural self. Both (...)
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