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Approaching Abjection

Oxford Literary Review 5 (1-2):125-149 (1982)

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  1. Subjects through translation.Lucy Tatman - 2011 - European Journal of Women's Studies 18 (4):425-430.
    A phenomenological account of an extended encounter with feminist theory in translation, the entirety of ‘Subjects through translation’ is best condensed in these three lines from the poet Adrienne Rich: it will be short, it will not be simple // You are coming into us who cannot withstand you // you are taking parts of us into places never planned. What is it like to read text after text in translation? How do familiar words become so strange? How to express (...)
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  • Theory on the toilet: A manifesto for dreckology.Roy Sellars - 1997 - Angelaki 2 (1):179 – 196.
  • On the Emergence of Science and Justice.Jenny Reardon - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (2):176-200.
    In the last few years, justice has emerged as a matter of concern for the contemporary constitution of technoscience. Increasingly, both practicing scientists and engineers and scholars of science and technology cite justice as an organizing theme of their work. In this essay, I consider why “science and justice” might be arising now. I then ask after the opportunities, but also the dangers, of this formation. By way of example, I explore the openings and exclusions created by the recent conjugation (...)
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  • Provocations on the Liberal Onto-Epistemology of Fascism.Sabeen Ahmed - 2023 - Philosophy Today 67 (1):1-19.
    What follows is a series of provocations, loosely interconnected, centered on the ambiguous relationship between liberalism and fascism in our age of democratic decline. Together they seek to trouble the established binaries and analytic frameworks that would position liberalism and fascism as antithetical and suggest instead that both emerge from the same condition of possibility: imperial racialism. In doing so, they reflect on the discursive function of fascism in sustaining liberal democracy as a project of white supremacy.
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