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  1. Globalization, Terrorism, and Morality: A Critique of Jean Baudrillard.Meutia Irina Mukhlis & Naupal - forthcoming - Intellectual Discourse:89-108.
    This paper challenges the claim, made by French sociologist andphilosopher, Jean Baudrillard in The Spirit of Terrorism, that contemporary“Islamic” terrorism as exemplified by the 9/11 attacks in the United States isa phenomenon that defies morality. By considering alternative explanationsand applying a thought experiment, we find that Baudrillard’s claim shouldbe rejected because it is based on invalid premises and inconsistencies.The problematic premises include Baudrillard’s statements that terror is aneffective strategy and the only means available to marginalized group seekingto oppose Western globalization. (...)
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  • Without Borders or Limits: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Anarchist Studies.Nathan Jun & Jorell Meléndez-Badillo (eds.) - 2013 - Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
    This volume of collected essays brings together conversations, papers, and debates from the Third Annual North American Anarchist Studies Network Conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Nathan Jun and Jorell A. Meléndez aspire to go beyond a simple collection of papers and instead aim to maintain a dialogue among different academic fields with the sole task of comprehending and re-thinking anarchist studies. With over twenty-one chapters written by a diverse range of activists, organizers, musicians, artists, poets, and academics, this book (...)
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  • From homo sacer to homo dolorosus: Biopower and the politics of suffering.Charles Wells - 2019 - European Journal of Social Theory 22 (3):416-431.
    This article argues that the indefinite detention and torture of prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp and the intentional destabilization of Palestinian civilian life in the Israeli occupied Palestinian territories are indicative of the emergence of a new postmodern form of power. Coining the term homo dolorosus – the man who is available to be made to suffer – this article seeks to understand this emergent politics of suffering through a historicized reading of Foucault’s typology of power, informed by (...)
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  • Notes on the Fundamental Unity of Humankind.Wim van Binsbergen - 2020 - Culture and Dialogue 8 (1):23-42.
    The argument claims the vital importance of the idea of the fundamental unity of humankind for any intercultural philosophy, and succinctly traces the trajectory of this idea – and its denials – in the Western and the African traditions of philosophical and empirical research. The conclusion considers the present-day challenges towards this idea’s implementation – timely as it is, yet apparently impotent in the face of mounting global violence.
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  • Al-qaeda terrorism and global poverty: New social banditry.Ivan Manokha - 2008 - Journal of Global Ethics 4 (2):95 – 105.
    This article examines the relationship between global poverty and terrorism. The approach is built around a concept of ‘social bandit’ developed by Eric Hobsbawm. By social bandits, Hobsbawm refers to those outlaws in pre-capitalist societies who robbed the rich, and gave to the poor. What was common to social bandits is a myth that surrounded their activity, and a strong popular sympathy and support. This article uses Hobsbawm's notion of social bandit to deal with the fact that in today's international (...)
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  • Why Has Critique Run out of Steam? From Matters of Fact to Matters of Concern.Bruno Latour - 2004 - Critical Inquiry 30 (2):225-248.
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  • The Style of What is to Come.Randy Laist - 2009 - Environment, Space, Place 1 (1):121-137.
    Since the very week of September 11, 2001, commentators have remarked on the apparent clairvoyance evidenced in the novelsof the American writer Don DeLillo. DeLillo’s novels have always represented the Twin Towers as gargantuan symbols of latent catastrophe. The towers have been significant to DeLillo as a particularly gargantuan representation of the manner in which modern mass-consciousness expresses itself in the form of material technologies. Throughout his career, DeLillo has described the World Trade Center not only as a physical structure, (...)
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  • Globalizing Democracy: Reflections on Habermas's Radicalism.Pauline Johnson - 2008 - European Journal of Social Theory 11 (1):71-86.
    According to many of his critics, Habermas is so preoccupied with `old normative maps' that he cannot really help us chart our options in a fast globalizing world. The following article contests aspects of this familiar critique. The argument is developed in three stages. First, some misapprehensions are targeted. No unreconstructed liberal, Habermas is shown to offer a discriminating interpretation of learning processes that need to guide political democracy in a global context. The far-reaching agenda of Habermas's programme for a (...)
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  • From Philosophy-Cinema to Philosophy-Screens: Reflections on the Thought of Mauro Carbone.Galen A. Johnson - 2020 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 52 (3):251-257.
    Mauro Carbone’s most recent book, Philosophy-Screens: From Cinema to the Digital Revolution advances the work and thought of his Flesh of Images: Merleau-Ponty Between Painting a...
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  • The Optical House of Tactile: The Bricolage-Like Response to COVID-19.Marco Innocenti - 2021 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 14 (1):45-55.
    This paper aims to analyse how COVID-19 pandemic is changing our perception of reality. It starts looking at our situation from the point of view of Riegl’s distinction between optical and tactile, and then it compares the nature of the relationship between these two approaches to Lévi-Strauss’s description of bricolage. Our current world-view turns out to be not only an optic one, because the optical approach is just the means by which we can articulate a private and social life messed (...)
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  • Treillage’d Space.Charlie Hailey - 2010 - Environment, Space, Place 2 (2):79-119.
    Late in their architectural career, Alison and Peter Smithson designed an eighty-square-foot, indoor-outdoor space for a man and his cat. The Smithsons described this modest space in methodological and phenomenal terms, noting that the addition to Axel Bruchhäuser’s Hexenhaus could be read “as an exemplar of a method by which a small physical change—a layering-over of air adhered to an existing fabric—can bring about a delicate tuning of persons with place.” The Hexenhaus’ tuning elements—second skin, tree screen, and double-acting mesh—create (...)
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  • Baudrillard's Lucidity Pact.Mike Gane - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (5):127-133.
    Of Jean Baudrillard’s four orders of simulacra: the natural, the commodity, the code, and the fractal the first three have been widely acknowledged, especially the importance of the theory of the third order for his analysis of the Gulf War. But the fourth order has not been accorded similar recognition and his works around this idea are not as widely known. It is clear that his essays on 9/11 drew substantially on ideas rounding out the theory of the fourth order. (...)
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  • How (not) to study terrorism.Verena Erlenbusch - 2014 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 17 (4):470-491.
    This article disputes the premise dominant in moral philosophy and the social sciences that a strict definition of terrorism is needed in order to evaluate and confront contemporary political violence. It argues that a definition of terrorism is not only unhelpful, but also impossible if the historicity and flexibility of the concept are to be taken seriously. Failure to account for terrorism as a historical phenomenon produces serious analytical and epistemological problems that result in an anachronistic, ahistorical, and reductive understanding. (...)
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  • Terror as potentiality – the affective rhythms of the political.Bülent Diken & Carsten Bagge Laustsen - 2018 - Journal for Cultural Research 22 (4):412-426.
    ABSTRACTThe paper addresses the ways in which the cultural, the affective and the political intersect, counter and/or feed upon one another in the context of contemporary terror. Initially, buildin...
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  • The (Impossible) Society of Spite.Bülent Diken - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (4):97-116.
    In the primordial scene, which Girard has described, society is constituted on the basis of the lynching mob, whose mimetic desire, envy and egotism culminate in sacrificing the scapegoat. With spite, though, we confront the opposite situation, in which the mimetic desire does not establish but rather destroys `society'. Here everybody, and not only the scapegoat, is threatened with destruction. Regarding the genealogy of spite, the article elaborates on radical nihilism (that is, the will to negation) and relates this to (...)
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  • Review Essay: Art History in Its Image War. Ten recent publications on image-politics in relation to the possibility of art historical analysis.James Day - 2015 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 24 (48).
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  • Nihilism, Liberalism and Terror.Neal Curtis - 2004 - Theory, Culture and Society 21 (3):141-157.
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  • “Open Your Mouth to Receive The Host of the Wounded Word”: passion(s) of liberation theology or eating the other.Litsa Chatzivasileiou - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (2):99 – 106.
    The ethical self is an embodied being of flesh and blood, a being who is capable of hunger …. “Only a being that eats can be for the Other …”; that is, only such a being can know what it means to g...
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  • Approximation, Mad Men and the Death of JFK.Stella Bruzzi - 2018 - Foundations of Science 23 (2):237-244.
    In this article I take the US television series Mad Men as an exemplary ‘approximation’, a term I adopt to signal the way in which certain texts construct a changeable, fluid ‘truth’ resulting from collisions, exchange and dialectical argument. Approximations are layered, their formal layerings mirroring a layered, multifaceted argument. Mad Men integrates and represents real historical events within a fictional setting, and act that suggests that an event or action can never be finished, fixed and not open to reassessment. (...)
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  • On Ernst Jünger’s ‘Total Mobilization’: a Re-evaluation in the Era of the War on Terrorism.John Armitage - 2003 - Body and Society 9 (4):191-213.
    My hypoltheses concerning the United States led War on Terrorism are derived from the German novelist, critic and social theorist Ernst J¸nger’s outstanding 1930 essay on ‘Total Mobilization’. Accordingly, this article explores J¸nger’s ‘Total Mobilization’ and what I label the ‘totally mobilized body’ as the philosophical underpinning of the War on Terrorism from the perspective of my own conceptions of ‘ hypermodern total mobilization’, ‘globalitarian rule’ and the ‘neoconservative body’. From this post-J¸ngerian or hypermodern viewpoint, the examination of the War (...)
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  • Baudrillard and Heidegger: Between Two Deaths.Vanessa Anne-Cecile Freerks - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (6):87-104.
    In this article, I compare the ways in which Baudrillard and Heidegger seek to bring attention to the importance of death for our personal existential situation which has now become repressed in conceptions of existence and society. Heidegger critiques public conceptions of death that serve to cover up its importance. Less well known is that, somewhat in parallel fashion, Baudrillard charts a ‘genealogy’ of the ‘extradition’ of the dead from the centre of the social and he claims that we live (...)
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  • Responsive Ethics and the War Against Terrorism: A Levinasian Perspective.Servan Adar Avsar - 2007 - Journal of Global Ethics 3 (3):317-334.
    Realist and liberal understandings of ethics as the dominant approaches to ethics in international relations are unable to respond efficiently to the call of the other in the age of war against terrorism as they revolve around the needs and the interests of the self. Such self-centred understandings of ethics cannot respond to the other ethically and respect the other in its otherness. Therefore, in this work I attempt to develop responsive ethics by drawing on Levinasian ethics which can create (...)
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  • Psychoanalysis, Religion and Islamic Radicalization.Andrea Mura - 2020 - In Y. Stavrakakis (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Psychoanalytic Political Theory. London, U.K.: Routledge.
    The chapter begins with a brief genealogy of psychoanalytic thinking in the broad area of religion. It first looks at Freud’s early modernist dismissal of religion, comparing this with Lacan’s valorisation of the ethical quests that both religion and psychoanalysis are said to share at the heart of their discourse. It then examines Lacan’s later pessimism in opposing the ‘triumph of religion’ in our times to an increasingly uncertain future for psychoanalysis. Moving from a conceptual discussion of these themes to (...)
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  • Reality, Fiction, and Make-Believe in Kendall Walton.Emanuele Arielli - 2021 - In Krešimir Purgar (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook of Image Studies. pp. 363-377.
    Images share a common feature with all phenomena of imagination, since they make us aware of what is not present or what is fictional and not existent at all. From this perspective, the philosophical approach of Kendall Lewis Walton—born in 1939 and active since the 1960s at the University of Michigan—is perhaps one of the most notable contributions to image theory. Walton is an authoritative figure within the tradition of analytical aesthetics. His contributions have had a considerable influence on a (...)
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  • Creativity with Apparatuses: from Chamber Music to Telematic Dialog.Paulo Chagas - 2013 - Flusser Studies 17 (1).
    This article examines Flusser’s ideas on creativity with apparatus as a model for communication in a telematic society. By placing Flusser’s thinking in the post World War II context, it explores relations to Walter Benjamin’s criticism of technical reproduction and Katherine Hayles’ notion of the post-human. By focusing on Flusser’s suggestion of chamber music as a prototype of telematic dialog, it proposes an analysis of chamber music, electroacoustic music and digital audio technology aiming to critically illuminate Flusser’s utopian vision of (...)
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  • Realised recordings: how documentary structures question the communication, construction and memory of the Real of past occurrences.Andrew Gerrard Lennon - unknown
    This thesis offers a comparison of documentary case studies to explore how moments from reality are recorded and how future representations of them can offer or instigate a parallax to create a new or different way of understanding the occurrence of such moments and how they have been remembered. I postulate that this shift in perspective offers an interaction with reality through a reconfiguration of the Real of these moments. The study will consider this assertion in relation to Žižek’s and (...)
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  • The Tiger and the Terrorist: How Malaysian NGOs deal with Terrorism.Rahmah bt Ahmad H. Osman & Abdullah Mekki - 2017 - Intellectual Discourse 25 (2).
    This paper investigates the efforts of four Malaysian NGOs; PERKIM, YADIM, ABIM, and JIM which are representative of Malaysian NGOs as a whole in defusing terrorism and promoting peace. Instead of taking the usual sociological approach, this article will apply a cultural-critical approach, drawing on the theories of relevant Western and Muslim inte llectuals in order to gain greater insight into the peace-promoting efforts. In so doing, it examines the space open for NGOs to work in, as well as the (...)
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  • Theoretical Times: Realigning Baudrillard and Žižek.Steve Redhead - 2016 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 10 (1).
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  • Žižek and Baudrillard on Terrorism:"Welcome to the Desert of the Real", Indeed!Gerry Coulter - 2016 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 10 (1).
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