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  1. Missing a generation: The rat man and Hamlet.Robert White - 1997 - Angelaki 2 (1):37 – 61.
  • The Question of Political Responsibility and the Foundation of the National Transitional Council for Libya.Daniel Matthews - 2012 - Law and Critique 23 (3):237-252.
    In March 2011 Jean-Luc Nancy published an article entitled ‘What the Arab Peoples Signify to Us’ in the Libération newspaper. The article supported the NATO-led military intervention in Libya that followed the anti-government protests of 15–16 February 2011. It is in the name of ‘political responsibility’ that Nancy makes his intervention. I want to explore the question of ‘political responsibility’ in light of Nancy’s work, and his Libération article in particular. I do this by first assessing one of the distinguishing (...)
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  • J’accepte: Jacques Derrida’s Cryptic Love by Unsealed Writing.Michał Krzykawski - 2017 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 8 (2):39-50.
    This article focuses on the autobiographical ghost that dwells in “Envois” and the multiple ways he/she/it interferes in Derrida’s concept of écriture. Read through love letters sent as postcards with the image representing Socrates writing in front of Plato, Derrida’s writing, I argue, definitely becomes a cryptic writing both in the sense of kryptô and secerno. I endeavor to show that “Envois”—largely autobiographical and entangled in his life events—is a harbinger of the secret that Derrida takes for a fundamental feature (...)
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  • Albeit eating: Towards an ethics of cannibalism.Sara Guyer - 1997 - Angelaki 2 (1):63 – 80.
  • Shredding, burning, tunnelling.Pelagia Goulimari - 2022 - Angelaki 27 (3-4):163-181.
    This essay marks the centenary of 1922, annus mirabilis of modernism but also the year when my grandparents became child refugees in the Asia Minor Catastrophe. In Mrs. Dalloway and her Diary, Virg...
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  • Translating the psychoanalysis of origins: Reflections on Nicolas abraham’s “introducing thalassa” and Sándor ferenczi’s theoretical legacy.Tom Goodwin - 2020 - Angelaki 25 (6):122-136.
    Nicolas Abraham’s “Introducing Thalassa” contributed to the revival of Sàndor Ferenczi’s ideas in France from the 1960s and initiated a transformation in his own psychoanalytic thinking as the thalassal argument was brought into a new context. This article argues that Abraham’s work provides a pathway to not only remember, but also revitalise Ferenczi’s notion of trauma and its inscription in biological processes from events that have happened is species pre-history as well as personal history. Abraham rethinks this “biological unconscious” through (...)
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  • Navigating The Psychoanalytic Symbol.Tom Goodwin - 2023 - Angelaki 28 (5):115-134.
    Nicolas Abraham (1919–75) rethinks the symbol as the very fabric of being. The author examines how this notion challenges the limitations of Husserl’s phenomenology and its reliance on a transcendental ego that can apprehend hyletic data in its purity. For Abraham, the symbol is worldly and resonates with its emergence from intersubjective foundations to constitute subjectivity impurely as a Dyad. It is born from trauma, a cut that differentiates Ego from Other but also generates anxiety (and Time) to keep its (...)
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  • Death and the dinner party: Hospitality and hungry history in Joyce and Bowen.Scott Brewster - 1998 - Angelaki 3 (3):59 – 68.
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  • Original alterity.Katherine Kline - unknown
    In this thesis I examine the notion of ethical subjectivity as characterized by an original relationship to alterity. Drawing upon Derrida, Levinas and psychoanalytic theory, I give a picture of a subject who is fundamentally responsive and inexorably bound to others, and I discuss the ethical and political implications of this condition. I extend the discussion of 'others' to include technology, suggesting that our ethical responsibility to alterity has been radicalized through deconstruction.
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