Can the subaltern smile? Oedipus without Oedipus

Contemporary Political Theory 14 (4):315-334 (2015)
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Abstract

This article explores the relationship between theory and praxis by contrasting three different models of intellectual endeavor: totalizing, particular and decolonial. Attending to the critique that Gayatri Spivak raised against Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze in Can the Subaltern Speak?, this article advocates a dramaturgical reading of texts as a model for political theory to address subaltern agency. It reads such agency in the smile that Pier Paolo Pasolini registers in his 1967 film version of Sophocles’ play, Oedipus Tyrannos. Dramaturgically read, Oedipus reveals another text, the tragic history of a yet insufficiently explored democratic alternative that goes against the established democracy and its complicity with inequality in the continued naturalization of slavery despite its foundation in equality. This subtext demands understanding Oedipus as a political production from the speechless agency of dissident servants, a more subversive aspect of democratic politics.

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Of Grammatology.Jacques Derrida - 1982 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 15 (1):66-70.
The Gift of the Nile: Hellenizing Egypt from Aeschylus to Alexander.Richard Hunter & Phiroze Vasunia - 2002 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 122 (4):887.
[Book review] democracy and the foreigner. [REVIEW]Bonnie Honig - 2002 - Ethics and International Affairs 16 (1):129-134.

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