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  1. Клопіт з біографією суверена: Історіографія, архіви і національна пам’ять.Володимир Фадєєв - 2021 - Filosofska Dumka 2021 (3):92-107.
    Пропонована стаття являє собою розвідку з реалістичної соціальної онтології, присвячену дослідженню взаємодії між національною пам'яттю, історіографією та архівом як визна- чальними соціальними інституціями модерної доби. У дослідженні зосереджено увагу на проб- лемі становлення і трансформацій уявлень про минуле національної спільноти — носія суве- ренітету. Під час аналізу автор доходить висновку, що національна пам’ять, архів та істо- ріо графія наділені власною динамікою, а взаємини між ними являють собою мінливу консте- ляцію відносин, що протягом останніх двох століть пройшла складну еволюцію. Починаючи з (...)
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  • Becoming-Bertha: virtual difference and repetition in postcolonial ‘writing back’, a Deleuzian reading of Jean Rhys’s "Wide Sargasso Sea".Lorna Burns - 2010 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 4 (1):16-41.
    Critical responses to Wide Sargasso Sea have seized upon Rhys's novel as an exemplary model of writing back. Looking beyond the actual repetitions which recall Brontë’s text, I explore Rhys's novel as an expression of virtual difference and becomings that exemplify Deleuze's three syntheses of time. Elaborating the processes of becoming that Deleuze's third synthesis depicts, Antoinette's fate emerges not as a violence against an original identity. Rather, what the reader witnesses is a series of becomings or masks, some of (...)
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  • Becoming-Bertha: virtual difference and repetition in postcolonial ‘writing back’, a Deleuzian reading of Jean Rhys’s "Wide Sargasso Sea".Lorna Burns - 2010 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 4 (1):16-41.
    Critical responses to Wide Sargasso Sea have seized upon Rhys’s novel as an exemplary model of writing back. Looking beyond the actual repetitions which recall Brontë’s text, I explore Rhys’s novel as an expression of virtual difference and becomings that exemplify Deleuze’s three syntheses of time. Elaborating the processes of becoming that Deleuze’s third synthesis depicts, Antoinette’s fate emerges not as a violence against an original identity. Rather, what the reader witnesses is a series of becomings or masks, some of (...)
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  • The Crisis of Legitimacy.James Mensch - 2023 - The European Legacy 29 (2):127-142.
    In recent years, the West has increasingly experienced a sense that the political aspects of its social life have undergone a profound alteration. There is a sense of blockage, of non-responsiveness, a feeling that the political class no longer represents the interests of the broader society. Underlying all of this is a loss of legitimacy. What exactly is legitimacy? How does it function? How is it lost? These are the questions that I address in this article. While I refer to (...)
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  • The Historical and Its Discontents: Nietzsche and Benjamin against “Historicism”.Yi Wu - 2020 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 34 (1):49-68.
    Representations of historicism as the loss of meaning in history and critiques of historicism as the critique of such a loss had been pervasive since late nineteenth century till the Second World War. Among historicism’s most powerful and representative critics were the young Nietzsche and Benjamin in his Parisian exile. This essay seeks to trace from Nietzsche to Benjamin an unbroken yet growing line of critique—of historicism as the “sickness of time” from which modernity suffers, and from which it has (...)
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  • Critique in the Field of Immanence: The Case of New Polish Art.Szymon Wróbel - 2019 - Philosophy Study 9 (9).
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  • What the digital world leaves behind: reiterated analogue traces in Mexican media art.David M. J. Wood - 2021 - AI and Society:1-10.
    How might experimental media art help theorise what falls by the wayside in the digital public sphere? Working in the years immediately following the launch of YouTube in 2005, some media artists centred their creative praxis towards the end of that decade upon rescuing, revalorising, and placing back into digital circulation audiovisual media formats and technologies that appeared aged or obsolete. Although there may be a degree of nostalgia behind such practices, these artworks articulate a cogent critique of the drive (...)
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  • What the digital world leaves behind: reiterated analogue traces in Mexican media art.David M. J. Wood - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2427-2436.
    How might experimental media art help theorise what falls by the wayside in the digital public sphere? Working in the years immediately following the launch of YouTube in 2005, some media artists centred their creative praxis towards the end of that decade upon rescuing, revalorising, and placing back into digital circulation audiovisual media formats and technologies that appeared aged or obsolete. Although there may be a degree of nostalgia behind such practices, these artworks articulate a cogent critique of the drive (...)
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  • Feeling Things: From Visual to Material Jurisprudence: Biber, Katherine. 2018. In Crime’s Archive: The Cultural Afterlife of Evidence. Abingdon: Routledge Manderson, Desmond. 2018. Law and the Visual: Representations, Technologies, Critique. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Kate West - 2020 - Law and Critique 31 (1):113-126.
    In this article I analyse the extent to which there has been a shift in the cultural turn in legal scholarship and specifically from visual to what I call material jurisprudence, that is from visual to material ways of knowing law. I do so through an analysis of Desmond Manderson’s edited collection, Law and the Visual: Representations, Technologies, Critique, and Katherine Biber’s monograph, In Crime’s Archive: The Cultural Afterlife of Evidence. Inspired by the material turn in the arts and humanities (...)
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  • Taking a Non-Linear Plunge into the Mnemonick Deep.Claire Waterton - 2007 - Metascience 16 (2):179-203.
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  • Dealing with a traumatic past: the victim hearings of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission and their reconciliation discourse.Annelies Verdoolaege - 2009 - Critical Discourse Studies 6 (4):297-309.
    In the final years of the twentieth and the beginning of the twenty-first century, there has been a worldwide tendency to approach conflict resolution from a restorative rather than from a retributive perspective. The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, with its principle of ‘amnesty for truth’ was a turning point. Based on my discursive research of the TRC victim hearings, I would argue that it was on a discursive level in particular that the Truth Commission has exerted/is still exerting (...)
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  • The archive and the human sciences: notes towards a theory of the archive.Irving Velody - 1998 - History of the Human Sciences 11 (4):1-16.
  • Information Technology, Ideology and Governmentality.Jeremy Valentine - 2000 - Theory, Culture and Society 17 (2):21-43.
    This article seeks to identify the political and ideological dimensions of the contemporary presence of information technology or infotech. This presence is experienced as the progressive unfolding of technology as the logic of the social itself. Rather than approaching these dimensions through their reduction to a ground, a symbolic totality or a specific interest, and argument is constructed from Laclau and Mouffe's concept of `antagonism' in conjunction with Claude Lefort's notion of `invisible ideology'. This gives the argument the advantage of (...)
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  • Transmission working from the collection.Jaspar Joseph-Lester & Sharon Kivland - 2007 - Angelaki 12 (2):1-2.
  • Law, the Digital and Time: The Legal Emblems of Doctor Who.Kieran Tranter - 2017 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 30 (3):515-532.
    This article is about time. It is about time, or more precisely, about the absence of time in law’s digital future. It is also about time travelling and the seemingly ever-popular BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who. Further, it is about law’s timefullness; about law’s pictorial past and the ‘visual baroque’ of its chronological fused future. Ultimately, it is about a time paradox of seeing time run to a time when time runs ‘No More!’ This ‘timey-wimey’ article is in (...)
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  • Translating Khora.Kristian Olesen Toft - 2024 - Derrida Today 17 (1):82-96.
    Khora, as it figures in Plato’s Timaeus, as read by Jacques Derrida, poses a singular translation problem, not only for having more than one meaning, but also for having less than one. This might be thought of in terms of Derrida’s distinction between ‘polysemy’ and ‘dissemination’, in so far as any concept of translation will ‘re-mark’ a translation or reception of something like khora, the ‘all-receiving’. This means both that khora is untranslatable and that its translation into every language is (...)
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  • The ordinariness of the archive.Osborne Thomas - 1999 - History of the Human Sciences 12 (2):51-64.
    This article argues that the notion of the archive is of some value for those interested in the history of the human sciences. Above all, the archive is a means of generating ethical and epistemological credibility. The article goes on to suggest that there are three aspects to modern archival reason: a principle of publicity whereby archival information is made available to some or other kind of public; a principle of singularity according to which archival reason focuses upon questions of (...)
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  • Philosophies and ethics of the project archive.Marek Tesar & Sonja Arndt - 2019 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (4):434-444.
    Archival research can be described as preoccupied with the ontology of data formation and collection in relation to the speaking and writing subject. From its outset, it can be located in the humanistic tradition, which the archival and historical discipline has inherited. Thus, archival research can be described as preoccupied with the ontology of data formation and collection in relation to the speaking and writing subject. At the same time, the archival researcher—the human subject—is produced as the sole source of (...)
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  • PESA archives: The social histories of philosophy of education.Margaret Joan Stuart - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (10):1006-1013.
    There is a move to centralise scattered documents; to archive all hardcopies of published journals in one place. PESA is moving to the institutionalisation of its history. We may ask, if philosophy of education in Australasia began at Bassar College, University of New South Wales on 20 May 1970, or if it emerged from the post-war focus on teacher education, teaching on the philosophy of education. Further to the injunction that we query who may be foregrounded; who assigned to possible (...)
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  • The space of memory: in an archive.Carolyn Steedman - 1998 - History of the Human Sciences 11 (4):65-83.
    By considering the experience of historians in national and regional archives, the relationship of memory to history and historical practice is discussed. The professional experience of historians is connected to wider social and psychological uses of the past, and of history in Euro pean societies, over the 200 years since official archives were inaugur ated.
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  • I never promised you a rose garden.… When landscape architecture becomes a laboratory for the Anthropocene.Henriette Steiner - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (2):178-201.
    In the summer of 2017, wildflower seeds were spread on a large, empty open space close to a motorway flyover just outside Copenhagen, Denmark. This was an effort to use non-mechanical methods to prepare the soil for an ‘urban forest’ to be established on the site, since the flowers’ roots would penetrate the ground and enable the planned new trees to settle. As a result, the site was transformed into a gorgeous meadow, and all summer long Copenhageners were invited to (...)
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  • Justice's Last Word: Derrida's Post-Scriptum to Force of Law.Elina Staikou - 2008 - Derrida Today 1 (2):266-290.
    This article considers Derrida's reading of Walter Benjamin's ‘Critique of Violence’ in ‘Force of Law’ with particular reference to the claims Derrida makes in his controversial ‘Post-Scriptum’. The article focuses in particular on Derrida's claim – a claim situated within the context of a discourse on the ‘final solution’ – that the ‘Critique of Violence’ is too Heideggerian. This claim is explored in the article mainly through reading Heidegger's ‘Anaximander's Saying’ with the purpose of showing some affinities between his and (...)
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  • Utopia: Reading and Redemption.Silvana Rabinovich - 2006 - Diogenes 53 (1):109-116.
    This paper suggests an approach to the various possibilities of reading as a practice responsible for generating thought. It might be said that it is an approach to the dismissal of reading as the origin of other paths of thought. Utopia, understood as anticipation, yields its place to the figure of redemption (in Benjamin’s sense of the word) as imminence of the absolutely other, expectation and extreme attention. The text invites the reader to try other routes in the practice of (...)
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  • Artificial Intelligence/Consciousness: being and becoming John Malkovich.Amar Singh & Shipra Tholia - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (2):697-706.
    For humans, Artificial Intelligence operates more like a Rorschach test, as it is expected that intelligent machines will reflect humans' cognitive and physical behaviours. The concept of intelligence, however, is often confused with consciousness, and it is believed that the progress of intelligent machines will eventually result in them becoming conscious in the future. Nevertheless, what is overlooked is how the exploration of Artificial Intelligence also pertains to the development of human consciousness. An excellent example of this can be seen (...)
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  • Utopia: Reading and Redemption.Rabinovich Silvana - 2006 - Diogenes 53 (1):109-116.
    This essay came about as the result of my suspicion that, in our societies of written traditions, the way we write and the thoughts we generate are intimately linked to the way we read. The practice of reading, in its many forms, is more than just a simple technique that allows us to familiarize ourselves with what other people think and thought: just as there exists a close relationship between the content and the form of a given text, the practice (...)
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  • Shallow Graves: Toward a Philosophical Comedy of Tears Over the Serial Dying of Gods.Yvonne Sherwood & Ward Blanton - 2013 - Derrida Today 6 (1):78-96.
    Recent debates about the legacy (and, sometimes, surpassing) of Derridean philosophy have often oriented themselves around questions of a new austerity in relation to the implicit philosophical functioning of God. Indeed, an increasing philosophical vigilance about the death or nonexistence of God has begun to be presented as a hallmark of recent criticisms of earlier receptions of Derrida and, by way of messianic structures of time, of Derridean politics as well. We argue that the inflating value of atheism in recent (...)
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  • Postgenomic witnesses: Mutant mice, model organisms, and the anti-archive of corporeal equivalence in micespace.Org.Jordan Sheridan - 2022 - Angelaki 27 (2):30-43.
    In 2013, Gail Davies and Helen Scalway launched Micespace.org, an interactive web-based art and research project that uses the platform of a mock mouse model repository to visualize the complex spa...
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  • Hiroshima temporalities.Michael J. Shapiro - 2015 - Thesis Eleven 129 (1):40-56.
    As is made evident in Rosalyn Deutsche’s recent book, Hiroshima After Iraq, Hiroshima keeps returning through the way diverse artistic genres evoke parallels between the bombing of Hiroshima and subsequent atrocities. After contrasting US and Japanese perspectives on the event of the bombing and drawing on Walter Benjamin’s concept of temporal plasticity, this essay ponders the future anterior of Hiroshima, its continuous will-have-beens, as new films and re-analyses of older ones continue to restage its significance.
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  • Freud’s dream of the double.Brian Seitz - 2014 - Continental Philosophy Review 47 (2):177-193.
    While the motif of the double serves a prominent role in Freud’s writings from early on, this essay is an examination of the determinative power of the double in two key texts, texts in which specific, new sets doubles emerge for the first time in Freud’s career. Totem and Taboo features a double that manifests itself primarily in the form of ambivalence. Beyond the Pleasure Principle features a double that manifests itself primarily in the form of a very peculiar conflict (...)
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  • Stiegler and the task of tertiary retention: On the amateur as an educational subject.Virgilio A. Rivas - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (5):521-531.
    The paper attempts to examine what is by all accounts a self-styled approach to contemporary existence, borrowing from Claire Colebrook’s 2017 essay on Bernard Stiegler’s so-called ‘curious problem of range’. Subsequently, we tackle Yuk Hui's interpretive reading of Stiegler's analysis of retentional digitality. Hui promotes the idea of archival metaphysics to overlay Stiegler’s concept of tertiary retention with tertiary protention. However, Stiegler's reformulation of Kant's aesthetics already addresses these concerns: the problem of range that his works continually provoke and the (...)
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  • Of Evil and Other Figures of the Liminal.Leonhard Praeg - 2010 - Theory, Culture and Society 27 (5):107-134.
    Inspired by research on the Rwanda genocide and the decapitation, in July 2008, of a passenger on a Canadian Greyhound bus, this occasional paper explores the shared agitation with which we may respond to two seemingly disparate instances of evil such as these. Arguing against discontinuous claims that distinguish between pre- and post-metaphysical conceptions of evil pivoting around the figure of Kant, the article identifies three logics suggestive of continuity in Western thought on evil: negativity, functionalism and the messianic. Focusing (...)
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  • Pathogenesis: Freud’s Paul and the question of historical truth.Matthew J. Peterson - 2021 - Continental Philosophy Review 55 (1):35-53.
    This article retrieves Freud’s Paul as a forgotten predecessor and untapped critic of the “return to Paul” in contemporary political theology and continental philosophy. Given that Sigmund Freud published Moses and Monotheism in 1939 having barely escaped from Vienna, the text’s reception has justly been dominated by the question of Freud’s identification with Moses and the relationship between psychoanalysis and Judaism. However, I argue that this narrow focus has obscured the more fundamental problem of the connection between religion and Freud’s (...)
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  • Digital archives in the cloud: Collective memory, institutional histories and the politics of information.Michael A. Peters & Tina Besley - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (10):1020-1029.
    The archive is a cultural institution that creates a framework for the social and collective memory and as such is one of the collection of knowledge institutions that not only preserves and classifies “texts” but uses them to re-create collective memory and sometimes to invent cultural histories. Like all knowledge institutions, the archive is also a construction deeply implicated in knowledge politics or what Foucault calls power/knowledge. In the past the archive has functioned as a central metaphor for the construction (...)
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  • The politics of the liberal archive.Joyce Patrick - 1999 - History of the Human Sciences 12 (2):35-49.
    The idea of considering the archive as a political technology of liberal governmentality is developed in this article, questions of the uses of archives (important as these are) taking second place here to the politics apparent in the design and idea of one particular form of the archive. This form is the public archive as it became apparent in the 19th-century institution of the public library, the two chief examples being in Manchester and at the British Museum in London. The (...)
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  • Future Emergencies: Temporal Politics in Law and Economy.Sven Opitz & Ute Tellmann - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (2):107-129.
    This article develops a notion of the ‘politics of time’ in order to analyse the effects that imaginations of future emergencies have in the fields of law and economy. Building on Niklas Luhmann’s theory of social time, it focuses on the multiplex temporalities in contemporary society, which are shown to interact differently with the ‘emergency imaginary’. We demonstrate that the apprehension of the future in terms of sudden, unpredictable and potentially catastrophic events reinforces current modes of producing financial futurity, while (...)
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  • The Derridean Event: History, Including the Life and Work of Derrida, as Rain.Christopher Morris - 2024 - Derrida Today 17 (1):60-81.
    Commentators agree that Derrida's criteria for an event were stringent: it had to be unique, unpredictable and unanticipatable; it must come as a surprise that defies all conceptualization, comprehension, appropriation. Can any historical occurrence pass such rigorous tests and be considered an event? The question now extends to whether Derrida's writings or life should constitute an event. This article traces Derrida's use of the word ‘event’ or ‘événement’ from ‘Signature Event Context’ and early readings of Nietzsche, Blanchot, and Benjamin through (...)
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  • Archiving Derrida.Marla Morris - 2003 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 35 (3):297-312.
  • Archives and history Towards a history of 'the use of state archives' in the 19th century.Philipp Müller - 2013 - History of the Human Sciences 26 (4):27-49.
    This article probes the relationship between archives and history by examining the archive policy on historical research in the first modern administration state of the German lands, the kingdom of Bavaria. Given the continuing tradition of the theory and practice of the arcana imperii in the 19th century, state archives served first and foremost the state. As a result, researchers’ interest in archival material was to undergo an administrative vetting procedure, in order to safeguard the interests of the state. By (...)
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  • Archives and history: Towards a history of ‘the use of state archives’ in the 19th century.Philipp Müller - 2013 - History of the Human Sciences 26 (4):27-49.
    This article probes the relationship between archives and history by examining the archive policy on historical research in the first modern administration state of the German lands, the kingdom of Bavaria. Given the continuing tradition of the theory and practice of the arcana imperii in the 19th century, state archives served first and foremost the state. As a result, researchers’ interest in archival material was to undergo an administrative vetting procedure, in order to safeguard the interests of the state. By (...)
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  • Gottschalk’s Engagement with the Ungovernable: Louis Moreau Gottschalk and the Bamboula Rhythm.Reagan Patrick Mitchell - 2018 - Educational Studies 54 (4):415-428.
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  • Ethics, archives and data sharing in qualitative research.Julie McLeod & Kate O’Connor - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (5):523-535.
    This article investigates dilemmas in the archiving and sharing of qualitative data in educational research, critically engaging with practices and debates from across the social sciences. Ethical, epistemological and methodological challenges are examined in reference to open access agendas, the politics of knowledge production, and transformations in research practices in the era of data management. We first consider practical and interpretive decisions in archiving qualitative data, then map current policy and regulatory frameworks governing research data management, taking Australia as a (...)
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  • Equal consideration of all – an aporetic project?Fritsch Matthias - 2006 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 32 (3):299-323.
    The article considers the relationships among three arguments that purport to establish the intrinsically contradictory or paradoxical nature of the modern project aiming at the equal consideration of all. The claim that the inevitable historical insertion of universal-egalitarian norms leads to always particular and untransparent interpretations of grammatically universal norms may be combined with the claim that the logic of determination of political communities tends to generate exclusions. The combination of these two claims lends specific force to the third argument (...)
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  • Archives in formation: privileged spaces, popular archives and paper trails.Michael Lynch - 1999 - History of the Human Sciences 12 (2):65-87.
    The article begins with Derrida’s etymology of the word ‘archive’: a privileged site to which records are officially consigned and in which they are guarded by legal authority. It explores contemporary variations on the theme of archive. The cases presented include efforts to construct scholarly archives that stand as personal monuments, struggles over the collection and consignment of records during official investigations of government scandals, and the ‘popular archive’ produced by the media spectacle surrounding the O. J. Simpson trial. The (...)
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  • ‘Mere chips from his workshop’: Gotthard Deutsch’s monumental card index of Jewish history.Jason Lustig - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (3):49-75.
    Gotthard Deutsch (1859–1921) taught at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati from 1891 until his death, where he produced a card index of 70,000 ‘facts’ of Jewish history. This article explores the biography of this artefact of research and poses the following question: Does Deutsch’s index constitute a great unwritten work of history, as some have claimed, or are the cards ultimately useless ‘chips from his workshop’? It may seem a curious relic of positivistic history, but closer examination allows us to (...)
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  • Signal event context: Trace technologies of the habit@online.Robert Luke - 2003 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 35 (3):333–348.
  • Signal Event Context: Trace technologies of the habit@online.Robert Luke - 2003 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 35 (3):333-348.
  • Reading history against the state secret: Carlos Soto román’s “chile project: [Re-classified],” the remediated archive, and the poetics of redaction.Astrid Lorange - 2022 - Angelaki 27 (2):17-29.
    This paper reads Carlos Soto Román’s “Chile Project: [Re-classified],” a documentary poem that remediates declassified state documents as an ambivalent form of witnessing bureaucracy and state viol...
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  • The Recording Cure: A Media Genealogy of Recorded Voice in Psychotherapy.Hadar Levy-Landesberg & Amit Pinchevski - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (6):125-146.
    This article explores the relationship between psychotherapy and sound reproduction technologies from the early 20th century to the present. Subscribing to a media genealogy approach, it traces the changing status of the recorded voice in therapy as set against broader transformations in the field of mental health. Delving into the recorded voice’s diverse applications across psychotherapeutic approaches, it demonstrates how technology worked to unravel the temporal and spatial formations of the therapeutic setting, thereby unsettling established hierarchies, terminologies, and techniques while (...)
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  • Otherwise than Hospitality: A Disputation on the Relation of Ethics to Law and Politics.Gilbert Leung & Matthew Stone - 2009 - Law and Critique 20 (2):193-206.
    At a time of unprecedented migration and social displacement, following a century ravaged by war and hegemonic shift, the question of hospitality presents itself with unparalleled urgency. Taking his cue from Immanuel Kant’s cosmopolitics, Jacques Derrida addressed this question by deliberating on the nature of the political obligation to the other person. Invoking the work of Emmanuel Levinas, this demand is first of all ethical, and unconditional. But Derrida was also acutely aware of the residual violence of the hospitable gesture, (...)
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  • Art, Affect, and Social Media in the ‘No Dakota Access Pipeline’ Movement.Robyn Lee - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (7-8):179-192.
    Indigenous-led activism against proposed oil pipelines has relied heavily on social media, as in the #NoDAPL campaign against the Dakota Access Pipeline. This paper explores affective engagement in online activism, including the Standing Rock ‘check-in’ campaign on Facebook. Moving beyond dichotomous understandings of embodied vs digital activism, Cannupa Hanska Luger’s Mirror Shields Project employs digital media in order to support direct action at Standing Rock. Patricia Clough draws a direct link between affect and technoscientific understandings of the body in her (...)
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