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Signs of paradox: irony, resentment, and other mimetic structures

Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press (1997)

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  1. Irony and Sarcasm in Ethical Perspective.Timo Airaksinen - 2020 - Open Philosophy 3 (1):358-368.
    Irony and sarcasm are two quite different, sometimes morally dubious, linguistic tropes. We can draw a distinction between them if we identify irony as a speech act that calls what is bad good and, correspondingly, sarcasm calls good bad. This allows us to ask, which one is morally worse. My argument is based on the idea that the speaker can legitimately bypass what is good and call it bad, which is to say that she may literally mean what she says. (...)
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  • Economies of sacrifice: Recognition, monadism, and alien‐ation∗.Mark Featherstone - 2001 - Cultural Values 5 (3):306-324.
    Abstract‘Economies of Sacrifice’ compares Girard's (1987) Hegelian inter‐dividualism to the Cartesian notion of the cogito and the Freudian theory of the unconscious in order to show how the monadic identity position violates the communicative balance of the self‐other bind. By looking at how both these thinkers constitute an identity category through the concept of sacrifice, the paper refers to the Girardian (1986) and Bataillean (1990) theories of violence and recognition in search of an alternative stance that may provide a more (...)
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  • “A Little Direct Intervention by the Author is Called For”: textual identity in the work of ronald sukenick.Adam Katz - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (2):63 – 80.
    Twentieth-century thought appears as a collective project aimed at dismantling metaphysical hierarchies in all their relays across the fields of human culture. Central to this project has been the...
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