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  1. The tain of the mirror: Derrida and the philosophy of reflection.Rodolphe Gasché - 1986 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    Deconstruction is no game of mirrors, revealing the text as a play of surface against surface. Its more radical philosophical effort is to get behind the mirror and question the very nature of reflection. The Tain of the Mirror explores that gritty surface without which no reflection would be possible.
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  • Ecrits: A Selection.M. E. Ragland Sullivan, Jacques Lacan & Alan Sheridan - 1978 - Substance 6 (21):166.
  • Joyce and Aquinas.William T. Noon - 1958 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 16 (3):411-412.
  • The Tain of the Mirror: Derrida and the Philosophy of Reflection.John McCumber & Rodolphe Gasche - 1991 - Philosophical Review 100 (2):300.
  • Edmund Husserl’s ‘Origin of Geometry’: An Introduction.Jacques Derrida - 1978 - University of Nebraska.
    Derrida's introduction to his French translation of Husserl's essay "The Origin of Geometry," arguing that although Husserl privileges speech over writing in an account of meaning and the development of scientific knowledge, this privilege is in fact unstable.
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  • Edmund Husserl’s ‘Origin of Geometry’: An Introduction.Richard M. Martin - 1980 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 40 (3):436-436.
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  • Ecrits: A Selection.Jacques Lacan - 1966/2005 - Routledge.
    First published in 1980. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  • The sublime object of ideology.Slavoj Žižek - 1989 - New York: Verso.
    In this provocative and original work, Slavoj Zizek takes a look at the question of human agency in a postmodern world. From the sinking of the Titanic to Hitchcock's Rear Window, from the operas of Wagner to science fiction, from Alien to the Jewish Joke, the author's acute analyses explore the ideological fantasies of wholeness and exclusion which make up human society. Linking key psychoanalytical and philosophical concepts to social phenomena such as totalitarianism and racism, the book explores the political (...)
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  • Shakespeare and Joyce: A Study of Finnegans Wake.Vincent John Cheng - 1984 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    After God, Shakespeare created most, James Joyce wrote in Ulysses. The importance of Shakespeare in Ulysses has been often discussed and documented; that this royal bard is as central and omnipresent in Finnegans Wake has been roundly agreed upon by Joyce scholars, yet no printed volume has exhaustively investigated the topic. This study arrives, therefore, as a welcome and timely look into the assertion, as on critic put it, that "Finnegans Wake is about Shakespeare." "Throughout his life," Dr. Cheng writes, (...)
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  • The Title of the Letter: A Reading of Lacan.Jean-Luc Nancy & Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe - 1992 - State University of New York Press.
    This book is a close reading of Jacques Lacan's seminal essay, "The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason Since Freud," selected for the particular light it casts on Lacan's complex relation to linguistics, psychoanalysis, and philosophy. It clarifies the way Lacan renews or transforms the psychoanalytic field, through his diversion of Saussure's theory of the sign, his radicalization of Freud's fundamental concepts, and his subversion of dominant philosophical values. The authors argue, however, that Lacan's discourse is marked (...)
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