Results for ' End of the world'

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  1.  11
    The ends of the world.Déborah Danowski - 2016 - Malden, MA: Polity. Edited by Eduardo Batalha Viveiros de Castro.
    The end of the world is a seemingly interminable topic; at least, of course, until it happens. Environmental catastrophe and planetary apocalypse are subjects of enduring fascination and, as ethnographic studies show, human cultures have approached them in very different ways. Indeed, in the face of the growing perception of the dire effects of global warming, some of these visions have been given a new lease on life. Information and analyses concerning the human causes and the catastrophic consequences of (...)
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  2.  4
    The End of the World.Nicholas Whittaker - 2022 - In Helen De Cruz & Johan De Smedt (eds.), Avatar: The Last Airbender and Philosophy: Wisdom From Aang to Zuko. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 34–42.
    In this chapter, the author argues that Avatar: the Last Airbender ( ATLA ) actually provides us with what the he will call an abolitionist philosophical account. Abolitionism is a theory of justice – derived primarily from the work of Black radicals – built on claims that global and local injustices can be explained by evil institutions or ways of life that cannot be reformed or changed, but that must be abolished. The world of ATLA is built on a (...)
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  3. The End of the World: The Science and Ethics of Human Extinction.John Leslie - 1996 - Routledge.
    Are we in imminent danger of extinction? Yes, we probably are, argues John Leslie in his chilling account of the dangers facing the human race as we approach the second millenium. The End of the World is a sobering assessment of the many disasters that scientists have predicted and speculated on as leading to apocalypse. In the first comprehensive survey, potential catastrophes - ranging from deadly diseases to high-energy physics experiments - are explored to help us understand the risks. (...)
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  4. The End of the World: A Theological Interpretation.Ulrich H. J. Kortner & Douglas W. Stott - 1995
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  5.  8
    The End of the World and Other Teachable Moments: Jacques Derrida's Final Seminar.Michael Naas - 2014 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    The End of the World and Other Teachable Moments follows the remarkable itinerary of Jacques Derrida’s final seminar, “The Beast and the Sovereign”, as the explicit themes of the seminar—namely, sovereignty and the question of the animal—come to be supplemented and interrupted by questions of death, mourning, survival, the archive, and, especially, the end of the world. The book begins with Derrida’s analyses, in the first year of the seminar, of the question of the animal in the context (...)
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  6. The End of the World after the End of Finitude: On a Recently Prominent Speculative Tone in Philosophy.Jussi Backman - 2017 - In Cavalcante Schuback Marcia & Lindberg Susanna (eds.), The End of the World: Contemporary Philosophy and Art. Rowman and Littlefield International. pp. 105-123.
    The chapter studies the speculative realist critique of the notion of finitude and its implications for the theme of the "end of the world" as a teleological and eschatological idea. It is first explained how Quentin Meillassoux proposes to overcome both Kantian and Heideggerian "correlationist" approaches with his speculative thesis of absolute contingency. It is then shown that Meillassoux's speculative materialism also dismantles the close link forged by Kant between the teleological ends of human existence and a teleological notion (...)
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  7.  12
    The End of the World: Contemporary Philosophy and Art.Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback & Susanna Lindberg (eds.) - 2017 - London: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    Omnipresent in popular culture, especially in film and literature, the theme of the 'end of the world' is often rejected from contemporary philosophy as hysterical apocalyptism. This volume attempts to show that it is vital that we address the motif of the 'end' in contemporary world – but that this cannot be done without thinking it anew.
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  8. On thinking at the end of the world : Derrida, Lyotard, Bataille.Michael Lewis - 2016 - In Will Stronge (ed.), Georges Bataille and Contemporary Thought. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
  9.  1
    The Plant at the End of the World: Precious Okoyomon’s Invasive Art.Yota Batsaki - 2024 - Critical Inquiry 50 (4):585-609.
    Plants are edging closer to the center of critical inquiry in the Anthropocene because they are intimately tied to legacies of settler colonialism, forced migration, related practices of extractive capitalism, and their environmental and human harm. Ostensibly sessile, plants travel constantly through their adaptations to ensure their survival and reproduction. In the modern period, this movement was taken to unprecedented scale by humans, triggering massive displacement of people and disruption to ecosystems. Among the many instances of plant movement, the scandalous (...)
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  10.  19
    The End of the World as We Know It: Changing Geographies of Ignorance and Knowledge, Hope and Faith.Lee Cormie - 2015 - Horizonte 13 (37):15-47.
    Here I wish to report on developments on three fronts concerning ‘religion’ in expanding global debates about the ‘the end of the world’ and ‘the ways we know it’, concerning: the word ‘religion’ itself, as half of the religion-science binary, and its marginalization–or complete absence–in the construction of the modern scholarly disciplines and university departments, and influencing of ‘modern’ culture and politics; proliferating doubts about the positivist epistemology of modern ‘science’; and the growing sense that we are caught up (...)
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  11.  15
    The End of the World: The Science and Ethics of Human Extinction.John Leslie - 1996 - Philosophy 72 (279):158-160.
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  12. The End of the World.John Leslie - 2000 - Mind 109 (433):155-158.
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  13.  21
    Education after the end of the world. How can education be viewed as a hyperobject?Nick Peim & Nicholas Stock - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (3):251-262.
    This article considers a series of ideas disturbing the conventional wisdom that decrees education an essential force in saving the world. Taking Morton's descriptions of hyperobjects seriously, we consider his radical idea that the world has ended amidst the eco-political depredations of the Anthropocene. Accordingly, we claim that education in modernity most properly belongs - materially and ideologically - with technological enframing and the rise of biopower. In other words, what is taken almost universally as the sacred realm (...)
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  14.  21
    Rebooting the end of the world: Teaching ecosophy through cinema.David R. Cole - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (10):1170-1180.
    The global pandemic has pushed many of us to online streaming services. A particular genre in these services is the ‘end of the world’ science fiction film, in and through which the speculated results of processes such as climate change are depicted. CGI technology is frequently deployed to create images of the end of the world, which is a backdrop to the narrative of, ‘saving ourselves amidst the ruins’. This philosophy of education essay will critically examine ten films (...)
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  15.  8
    The mushroom at the end of the world: on the possibility of life in capitalist ruins.Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing - 2015 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    Prologue: autumn aroma -- What's left? -- Arts of noticing -- Contamination as collaboration -- Some problems with scale -- Interlude: smelling -- After progress : salvage accumulation -- Working the edge "freedom" -- Open ticket, Oregon -- War stories -- What happened to the state? : two kinds of Asian Americans in translation -- Between the dollar and the yen -- From gifts to commodities and back -- Salvage rhythms : business in disturbance -- Interlude: tracking -- Disturbed beginnings (...)
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  16.  20
    The End of the World As We Know It: Faith, Fatalism, and Apocalypse in America (review).Kevin R. West - 1997 - Symploke 5 (1):241-242.
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  17.  14
    The End of the World as We Know It?David Oldroyd - 2006 - Metascience 15 (1):79-87.
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  18.  33
    The Ends of the World.Roxanne Lynn Doty - 2008 - Theory and Event 11 (1).
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  19.  8
    happy end of the world-final edition". Relgious and apocalyptic narratives in the Lynx commercial" Final Edition 2012.Lisa Kienzl - 2011 - Disputatio Philosophica 13 (1):83-90.
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  20. The end of the world?!(the philosophical concept according to the Old Testament).K. Nandrasky - 2002 - Filozofia 57 (3):181-205.
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  21. “Until the End of the World”: Eidetic Variation and Absolute Being of Consciousness—A Reconsideration.Claudio Majolino - 2016 - Research in Phenomenology 46 (2):157-183.
    _ Source: _Volume 46, Issue 2, pp 157 - 183 This paper suggests interpreting Husserl’s thesis of the “fictional destruction of the world” in the light of the eidetic method of variation. After having reconstructed Husserl’s argument and shown how it relies on the methodologically regimented joint venture of free fantasy and bounded concepts, the author concludes that the a priori of a world, namely its empirical style, is tantamount to the a priori of a world that (...)
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  22.  20
    The End of the World? Mental Causation, Explanation and Metaphysics.Michele Di Francesco & Alfredo Tomasetta - 2015 - Humana Mente 8 (29).
    In this paper we offer some ideas on the relationship between metaphysics of causation and common explanatory practices of behaviour. We first suggest a sort of “negotiating model” for theorizing about mental causation, and then examine the so-called causal closure argument focusing on some morals one can draw from it that further illustrate the model we recommend.
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  23.  63
    The End of the World.William Lane Craig - 2010 - In Melville Y. Stewart (ed.), Science and Religion in Dialogue. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 703--719.
    This chapter contains sections titled: * Physical Eschatology * Theological Eschatology * Thermodynamic Evidence of Creation * Escaping Creation * Christian Theological Eschatology * Notes.
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  24. Apocalypse Theory and the Ends of the World.Malcolm Bull - 1996 - Utopian Studies 7 (2):226-228.
  25. The End of the World: From the Lisbon Earthquake to the Last Days.Kyrre Kverndokk - 2019 - In Helge Jordheim & Erling Sandmo (eds.), Conceptualizing the world: an exploration across disciplines. New York: Berghahn.
     
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  26.  56
    Blackened Debate at the End of the World.Amber E. Kelsie - 2019 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 52 (1):63-70.
    At the End of the World there is blackness doing the (im)possible. This essay considers the (im)possibility of debate in our contemporary crisis through an examination of the domestication of potentiality in rhetorical dialectic. Debate, in its presupposition of stasis, parallels sovereignty's ontologizing operations of antiblack racial terror that suspend contingency. Meanwhile, blackness was already getting it done. The U.S. Civil War serves as a privileged example for thinking through blackness as the groundless constitutive outside to the possible that (...)
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  27.  6
    History at the End of the World? History, Climate Change and the Possibility of Closure.Mark Levene, Rob Johnson & Richard Maguire (eds.) - 2010 - Humanities-EBooks.
    The authors of this collection of essays propose that climate change means serious peril. The approaches begin from archaeology, literature, religion, psychology, sociology, philosophy of science, engineering and sustainable development, as well as 'straight' history. Our argument, however, is not about the science per se. It is about us, our deep and more recent history, and how we arrived at this calamitous impasse. With contributions from academic activists and independent researchers, History at the End of the World challenges advocates (...)
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  28. The improper apocalypse : vitalism with and against a psychoanalytic approach to the end of the world.Timothy Secret - 2022 - In Jakub Kowalewski (ed.), The Environmental Apocalypse: Interdisciplinary Reflections on the Climate Crisis. Routledge.
     
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  29.  27
    Looking Back on the End of the World.Dietmar Kamper, Christoph Wulf & David Antal (eds.) - 1989 - Semiotext(E).
    First published in 1989, Looking Back on the End of the World raises provocative questions about the possibilities of critical knowledge in social systems that seem to have "surpassed history." Unlike recent works that make history end with the consumer, or project the conflict between the capitalist and the oppressed into the future, the writers in these essays perform a much more basic task: they argue that we can now think through the "end of the world." The idea (...)
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  30.  29
    The World after the End of the World.Kas Saghafi - 2017 - Oxford Literary Review 39 (2):265-276.
    In several late texts, Derrida meditated on Paul Celan's poem ‘Grosse, Glühende Wölbung’, in which the departure of the world is announced. Delving into the ‘origin’ and ‘history’ of the ‘conception’ of the world, this paper suggests that, for Derrida, the end of the world is determined by and from death—the death of the other. The death of the other marks, each and every time, the absolute end of the world.
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  31.  7
    The world after the end of the world: a spectro-poetics.Kas Saghafi - 2020 - Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
    In this book, Kas Saghafi argues that the notion of "the end the world" in Derrida's late work is not a theological or cosmological matter, but a meditation on mourning and the death of the other. He examines this and several other tightly knit motifs in Derrida's work: mourning, survival, the phantasm, the event, and most significantly, the term salut, which in French means at once greeting and salvation. An underlying concern of The World after the End of (...)
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  32. Planetary activism at the end of the world: Feminist and posthumanist imaginaries beyond Man.Sanna Karkulehto, Aino-Kaisa Koistinen & Nóra Ugron - 2022 - European Journal of Women's Studies 29 (4):577-592.
    We are currently experiencing a planetary crisis that will lead, if worst comes to worst, to the end of the entire world as we know it. Several feminist scholars have suggested that if the Earth is to stay livable for humans and nonhumans alike, the ways in which many human beings – particularly in the wealthy parts of the world, infested with Eurocentrism, colonialism, neoliberalism, and capitalism – inhabit this planet requires radical, ethical, and political transformation. In this (...)
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  33.  7
    It’s the end of the World as we know it: Racism as a global killer of Black people and their emancipatory freedoms.Jason Arday - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (14):1418-1420.
    That’s great, it starts with an earthquake… are the famous opening tenets to REM’s anthemic stream of political consciousness, ‘It’s the end of the world as we know it’ and within this treatise, th...
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  34.  8
    Deleuze at the End of the World: Latin American Perspectives.Dorothea E. Olkowski & Julián Ferreyra (eds.) - 2020 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    The philosophy of Deleuze is as relevant to contemporary thought as it is obscure and complex. Deleuze at the End of the World guides readers through this maze by exploring the raw material that Deleuze took from thinkers in various fields of knowledge to construct his own concepts, some of them well known (such as Hegel, Kant, Husserl, Balibar and Blanchot) and some widely unexplored (Selme, Guillaume, Bakhtine and Dalcq). At the same time, readers will gain access to Latin (...)
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  35.  36
    The Metamorphosis of “The End of the World”.Victoria S. Harrison - 2005 - Philosophy and Theology 17 (1-2):33-50.
    This paper highlights certain features of the metamorphosis that the concept “the end of the world” has undergone from its origin in early Christian thought to the present day. This concept has, in recent decades, become increasingly prominent within Western European Lutheran and Roman Catholic theology. This paperdemonstrates that the notion of the end of the world popularized by Jürgen Moltmann and Karl Rahner, despite the traditional, biblical language in which it is couched, has more affinity with the (...)
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  36.  17
    The Metamorphosis of “The End of the World”.Victoria S. Harrison - 2005 - Philosophy and Theology 17 (1-2):33-50.
    This paper highlights certain features of the metamorphosis that the concept “the end of the world” has undergone from its origin in early Christian thought to the present day. This concept has, in recent decades, become increasingly prominent within Western European Lutheran and Roman Catholic theology. This paperdemonstrates that the notion of the end of the world popularized by Jürgen Moltmann and Karl Rahner, despite the traditional, biblical language in which it is couched, has more affinity with the (...)
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  37.  11
    How to Be Happy After the End of the World.Erik D. Baldwin - 2007-11-16 - In Jason T. Eberl (ed.), Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy. Blackwell. pp. 3–14.
    This chapter contains section titled: The Good Life: Booze, Pills, Hot and Cold Running Interns? “Be the Best Machines (and Humans) the Universe Has Ever Seen” “Be Ready to Fight or You Dishonor the Reason Why We're Here” “Each of Us Plays a Role. Each Time a Different Role” Notes.
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  38. Melancholia, an alternative to the end of the world: a reading of Lars Von Trier's film.David Denny - 2016 - In Sheila Kunkle (ed.), Cinematic cuts: theorizing film endings. Albany: SUNY Press.
     
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  39.  24
    The beginning and end of the world.Edmund Taylor Whittaker - 1943 - London,: Oxford university press, H. Milford.
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  40.  74
    From “education for sustainable development” to “education for the end of the world as we know it”.Sharon Stein, Vanessa Andreotti, Rene Suša, Cash Ahenakew & Tereza Čajková - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (3):274-287.
    In this article, we address the limitations of sustainable development as an orienting educational horizon of hope and change, given that mainstream development presumes the possibility of perpetual growth and consumption on a finite planet. Facing these limitations requires us to consider the inherently violent and unsustainable nature of our modern-colonial modes of existence. Thus, we propose a shift from “education for sustainable development” to “education for the end of the world as we know it.” We contend that the (...)
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  41.  25
    The courage to be and the end of the world.Anita Calvert - 2011 - Disputatio Philosophica 13 (1):15-24.
    One of the greatest values of human being and her/his unique role in the world is giving life to forms created in their minds into shared world. Once this ability has been obstructed, humans rebel against the destiny they themselves or fate has brought and confronted them with. In this text we will analyze the proper human attitude in front of the threats of self-affirmation in existence, morals and their true, unique being. The best approach to the meaning (...)
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  42.  36
    Images of the end of the world: The Apocalypse in the Xylographies by the german Artist Alberto Durero.María del Mar Ramírez Alvarado - 2013 - Alpha (Osorno) 36:159-176.
    Este trabajo profundiza en un momento importante en la historia de la comunicación como lo fue el de la difusión de la imprenta y el desarrollo de las técnicas del grabado aplicadas a la impresión. Se estudian las imágenes del libro bíblico del Apocalipsis, ilustrado por el artista alemán Alberto Durero a finales del siglo XV. Para ello se ha ahondando en el contexto histórico en el que fueron producidas, en la personalidad y circunstancias que rodearon la vida del artista (...)
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  43.  20
    Rhetoricity at the End of the World.Diane Davis - 2017 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 50 (4):431-451.
    Henceforth "to transform" should mean "to change the sense of sense."The field of the entity … is structured according to the diverse—genetic and structural—possibilities of the trace.The first article in the first issue of Philosophy and Rhetoric is "The Rhetorical Situation," Lloyd Bitzer's critical exegesis on "the nature of those contexts in which speakers or writers create rhetorical discourse". Bitzer contends that the rhetor produces "the rhetorical text" when a "real" or "natural" —"objective and publicly observable" —situation "calls the discourse (...)
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  44.  30
    Hope after ‘the end of the world’: rethinking critique in the Anthropocene.Pol Bargués, David Chandler, Sebastian Schindler & Valerie Waldow - 2024 - Contemporary Political Theory 23 (2):187-204.
    Many contemporary thinkers of the Anthropocene, who attempt to articulate a non-modern and relational ontology, all too readily dismiss critical theory inherited from the Frankfurt School for being anthropocentric, failing to acknowledge certain basic similarities. Instead, this article argues that the scaffolding of Anthropocene thinking—the recognition of the origins of the contemporary condition of ‘loss of world’ and the hope of ‘living on in the ruins’—share much with earlier critical theorists’ recognition that the Holocaust necessitated a fundamental break with (...)
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  45.  39
    The End of the World: The Science and Ethics of Human Extinction By John Leslie. [REVIEW]Antony Flew - 1997 - Philosophy 72 (279):158-.
  46. Is the end of the world nigh?John Leslie - 1990 - Philosophical Quarterly 40 (158):65-72.
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  47.  4
    Visions of Sodom: religion, homoerotic desire, and the end of the world in England, c. 1550-1850.Harry Cocks - 2017 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    The Roman Sodom -- City of destruction -- The end of the world -- Laws -- Histories -- Lust and morality in the (long) eighteenth century -- The discovery of Sodom, 1851.
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  48. Venus and the end of the world [Spanish].Gonzalo Munévar - 2006 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 4:10-25.
    Resumen Este artículo busca demostrar que los argumentos generales acerca de la exploración científica valen también para las ciencias espaciales. El trabajo se basa en el ejemplo de la exploración de Venus y lo que esta nos dice acerca de nuestro propio planeta. Argumenta que el concepto de la probabilidad de Leslie es incorrecto, como también lo son las dudas sobre la evidencia Venusiana. Así mismo, concluye que no se puede rechazar la importancia que tienen los descubrimientos inesperados que han (...)
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  49. The Beginning and End of the World Delivered Before the University of Durham at King's College, Newcastle Upon Tyne, in February 1942.E. T. Whittaker - 1942 - Oxford University Press; H. Milford.
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  50.  42
    ‘It's the End of the World!’: The Paradox of Event and Body in Hitchcock's The Birds.Bruno Lessard - 2010 - Film-Philosophy 14 (1):144-173.
    This article examines the concept of ‘event’ and the manner in which it has been neglected in both ecocriticism and Hitchcock studies. Using The Birds (1963) to rethink the premises of ecocritics’ discussion of nature, animals, and disasters in cinema and Hitchcock scholars’ emphasis on representation and symbolism, the article argues that it has become imperative to philosophically foreground ‘events’ in light of the numerous contemporary films that revolve around them. Hitchcock’s film is shown to propose a renewed concept of (...)
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