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  1. La imbricación vida-poder en el pensamiento de Michel Foucault y Giorgio Agamben.Marcelo Raffin - 2018 - Cuestiones de Filosofía 22 (4):117-137.
    Este artículo pretende analizar la particular relación de imbricación que Michel Foucault y Giorgio Agamben han venido a establecer entre la vida humana y el poder. A tal fin, se propone un recorrido por los dos momentos centrales de su producción que permiten dar cuenta de dicha imbricación: en el caso de Agamben, el referido a la investigación “homo sacer” y, en el de Foucault, el de su investigación en torno de la biopolítica como acontecimiento decisivo de la modernidad. Ambas (...)
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  • De Anima: Or, Ulysses and the Theological Turn in Modernist Studies.Ayers David - 2017 - Humanities 6 (3):57.
    Focusing on Joyce’s use of Aristotle’s De Anima, and on Aquinas’s response to Aristotle, this essay takes, as its starting point, the recourse to two areas of enquiry in recent work on modernism: animal studies and phenomenology. In this essay we examine the intersection within Ulysses of the concept of the soul in Aristotle and Aquinas, show how this relates to questions of animality, and open the way to asking what implication the theological reflection on the soul at the centre (...)
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  • Ontologías de lo común en el pensamiento de Giorgio Agamben y Roberto Esposito: entre ética y política.Matías Saidel - 2013 - Isegoría 49:439-457.
    El presente trabajo reflexiona sobre el pensamiento de la comunidad en Giorgio Agamben y Roberto Esposito. Ambos interrogan lo común desde una perspectiva impolítica que intenta deconstruir los presupuestos de la metafísica y de la filosofía política tradicionales para poder elaborar una conceptualidad afirmativa en clave ontológica. En estos autores predomina el recurso a la figura de la comunidad, situada luego en el horizonte de la biopolítica, ya que la vida deviene el centro hacia el cual apuntarían los dispositivos de (...)
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  • Re-appraising the subject and the social in western philosophy and in contemporary orthodox thought.Ilias Papagiannopoulos - 2006 - Studies in East European Thought 58 (4):299 - 330.
    The notion of a constitutive lack, which formed the ambivalent initial framework of Western metaphysics, marks the contemporary attempt to think anew the social and the subject. While metaphysics had difficulties to justify ontologically the event of sociality and was tempted to construct a closed subjectivity, post-metaphysical thought by contrast justifies often the sociality of a non-identity. The presuppositions of Orthodox-Christian theology allow us to think of subjectivity and sociality in terms of a different ontology, elaborating a new synthesis between (...)
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  • On the relevance of Carl Schmitt’s concept of Großraum in contemporary international politics.Roberto Orsi - 2021 - Journal of International Political Theory 17 (3):295-315.
    Since the end of the Cold War, a number of authors have affirmed the relevance of Carl Schmitt’s concept of Großraum for contemporary international politics. This article reviews those claims and argues that Großraum has little to offer in analytical terms to enhance our understanding of the international political situation in this early twenty-first century. Those authors who wish to revive Großraum for the sake of their theoretical work overlook vitally important components of this concept. Furthermore, their claims fail to (...)
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  • David M. Seymour: Law, Antisemitism and the Holocaust: Routledge-Cavendish, New York and Oxford, 2007, ISBN 9781904385431. [REVIEW]Luciano Nuzzo - 2009 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 22 (3):355-364.
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  • Governance, Sovereignty and Profane Hope in a Globalised Catastrophe-World.Francisco Naishtat - 2010 - Diogenes 57 (4):46-55.
  • Imagining Law: Marginalised Bodies/Indigenous Spaces.Ben Hightower & Kirsten Anker - 2016 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 29 (1):1-8.
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  • The Limits of Hospitality: Political Philosophy, Undocumented Migration and the Local Arena.Heidrun Friese - 2010 - European Journal of Social Theory 13 (3):323-341.
    How to hospitably welcome refugees and migrants presents urgent questions for social and political thought. Current debates can be attributed to three discursive fields. Liberal versions hold that there are good reasons for political and legal limits of hospitality, critical perspectives advocate a renewed cosmopolitanism and, finally, deconstructive perspectives focus on the demand of unconditional hospitality as an absolute ethical requirement. These concepts trouble the conventional congruence of citizenship and bounded territory that make up modern nation states, on the one (...)
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  • Dogville, or, the Dirty Birth of Law.Andrea Brighenti - 2006 - Thesis Eleven 87 (1):96-111.
    While avoiding the pretence of producing an exhaustive reading of such a complex object as Lars Von Trier's Dogville, this article selectively uses the film to explore the process of the emergence of a new legality and a new set of legal relationships within a community. Two superimposed layers of meaning, the biblical and the mythic, are considered and their interaction with two different reasons, the symbolic and the economic, is suggested and explored. The categories of ‘critical being’, by Fitzpatrick (...)
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  • What is Love? Discourse about Emotions in Social Sciences.Simone Belli, Rom Harré & Lupicinio íñiguez - 2010 - Human Affairs 20 (3):249-270.
    What is Love? Discourse about Emotions in Social Sciences The study of emotions has been one of the most important areas of research in the Social Sciences. Social Psychology has also contributed to the development of this area. In this article we analyse the contribution of social Psychology to the study of emotion, understood as a social construct, and its strong relationship with language. Specifically, we open a discussion on the basis of the general characteristics of the Social Psychology of (...)
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  • Classical Distributive Justice and the European Healthcare System: Rethinking the Foundations of European Health Care in an Age of Crises.Stéphane Bauzon - 2015 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 40 (2):190-200.
    The state subvention and distribution of health care not only jeopardize the financial sustainability of the state, but also restrict without a conclusive rational basis the freedom of patients to decide how much health care and of what quality is worth what price. The dominant biopolitics of European health care supports a healthcare monopoly in the hands of the state and the medical profession, which health care should be opened to the patient’s authority to deal directly for better basic health (...)
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  • Introduction to Biopolitics and Ancient Thought.Jussi Backman & Antonio Cimino - 2022 - In Jussi Backman & Antonio Cimino (eds.), Biopolitics and Ancient Thought. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 1-11.
    In the introduction to the volume, the editors explain the overarching aim of the volume and contextualize the main themes of its chapters. Even if the notions of biopolitics and biopower have played a crucial role in philosophy, the humanities, and the social sciences over the last decades, they have been used in various and at times diverging senses, which has also produced different narratives about the history of biopolitics. The main aim of the volume is to clarify whether and (...)
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  • Una cuestión de humanidad.Juan Acerbi - 2020 - Cuadernos Filosóficos / Segunda Época 16.
    The question of the trait that would distinguish human beings from the rest of the animals has kept humanity awake for centuries. Their ability to express themselves through words, their use of reason, their self-awareness of their finiteness or their capacity to produce and appreciate the art have been some of the faculties that, over the centuries, have come to give humanity a justification for its position in the world. With the advent of Artificial Intelligence, many of these attributes came (...)
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  • Bene vivere politice: On the (Meta)biopolitics of "Happiness".Jussi Backman - 2022 - In Jussi Backman & Antonio Cimino (eds.), Biopolitics and Ancient Thought. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 126-144.
    This chapter approaches the question of biopolitics in ancient political thought looking not at specific political techniques but at notions of the final aim of the political community. It argues that the “happiness” (eudaimonia, beatitudo) that constitutes the greatest human good in the tradition from Aristotle to Thomas Aquinas is not a “biopolitical” ideal, but rather a metabiopolitical one, consisting in a contemplative activity situated above and beyond the biological and the political. It is only with Thomas Hobbes that civic (...)
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  • Stadio d’eccezione. Governo degli uomini e Mondo Ultras.Fabio Milazzo - unknown
    After the events, during the final game of Coppa Italia between Napoli and Fiorentina, that led to the death of Ciro Esposito, who was a Napoli supporter, the Italian government issued a «decreto-stadi», an emergency law intended to address the problem of stadium violence. The reaction of the media to these events contributed to the creation of a scénarisation, orientating public opinion in relation to these events. In this way the stadium becomes a laboratory in which to experiment with techniques (...)
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  • L’involuzione creatrice, o alla ricerca del proprio di una vita.Emilia Marra - unknown
    In this paper I aim to introduce the very last text written by Gilles Deleuze, Immanence : une vie.... In this text we discover another way of thinking life, a life that would not be merely my singular life. “Life and nothing more” doesn’t refer to my biological life or to the determinations that describe my life, but to something else that we all have in common. This “something” is so precious because it is precisely what biopolitics cannot reach. Reading (...)
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  • Dionysian biopolitics: Karl kerényi’s concept of indestructible life.Kristóf Fenyvesi - 2014 - Comparative Philosophy 5 (2).
    Scholar of religion Karl Kerényi’s last book, Dionysos, is a grand attempt at reinterpreting ζωη ( zoe ), the Greek concept of indestructible life, which he distinguishes from βίος (bios), finite life. In Kerényi’s view, the meaning and sensual experience of zoe was expressed in its richest form in the Cretan beginnings of the cult of Dionysos. The major characteristics of this cult, as Kerényi describes, were beyond the cultural, political, and sexual limits of the Christian interpretations of life and (...)
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  • Folket som rest.Mikkel Bolt - 2015 - Slagmark - Tidsskrift for Idéhistorie 72:71-88.
    The article brings together three short texts by Giorgio Agamben: “What is a people?” from Means without Ends from 1996, the third chapter from The Time that Remains from 2000 and the oral presentation “What is a movement?” from 2005. It analyzes Agamben’s idea of the people as internally divided. Through a juxtaposition with Marx’ notion of the proletariat, the article discusses Agamben’s attempt to develop a inoperative, but nonetheless revolutionary counter-paradigm to the biopolitical power paradigm of the West.
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