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The deaths of Roland Barthes

In Hugh J. Silverman (ed.), Philosophy and Non-Philosophy Since Merleau-Ponty. Routledge (1988)

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  1. Nothingness and Emptiness: A Buddhist Engagement with the Ontology of Jean-Paul Sartre.Steven W. Laycock - 2012 - SUNY Press.
    Using Buddhist thought, explores and challenges the philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre.
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  • Phenomenology of a Photograph, or: How to use an Eidetic Phenomenology.L. Sebastian Purcell - 2010 - PhaenEx 5 (1):12-40.
    The present article aims to make good on Roland Barthe’s unfulfilled promise to provide an eidetic phenomenology for the photograph. Though the matter deserves consideration simply because no relevant account has yet been provided, the consequences of adumbrating eight eidetic features, we hope to show, bear directly on the phenomenology of time, the possibility of technological events, and the status of truth as what Heidegger called alētheia . Finally, and most importantly for the enterprise of phenomenological reflection, if we are (...)
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  • Born with the dead: Blanchot's mourning.Lars Iyer - 2000 - Angelaki 5 (3):39 – 50.
  • Life after Derrida: Anacoluthia and the agrammaticality of following.Sarah Dillon - 2006 - Research in Phenomenology 36 (1):97-114.
    Written on Derrida's "'Le Parjure,' Perhaps: Storytelling and Lying," this essay takes the concept of the anacoluthon from Derrida's text and—commenting on the figure of the woman in this male lineage—further invents the concept of the anacoluthon by demonstrating how its formal linguistic definition provides a model for the event of reading and writing—of thinking—that Derrida so admires in Hillis Miller's work and practices in his own. By employing this same reading practice in its own thinking, this essay does not (...)
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