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  1.  7
    Lacan, Deleuze and World Politics: Rethinking the Ontology of the Political Subject.Andreja Zevnik - 2016 - Routledge.
    This book aims to re-think the way in which the subject is inscribed in the modern political, and does so by exploring the potentiality of Lacano-Deleuzian theoretical framework. It concerns a different ontology and a non-dualist understanding of political and legal existence, by focusing on questions such as _how to think alternative notions of political existence_ and _what kind of political, social and legal order do these come to create. _ This investigation into political appearance of subjects through concepts of (...)
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  2.  7
    Ethics: An Impossible Politics—Perversion, Law and Racial Difference.Andreja Zevnik - 2023 - Law and Critique 34 (3):435-447.
    This paper takes the removal of the Colston statue in Bristol in the summer of 2020 and the accompanying Black Lives Matter protest as a political setting which can help us explore the radical political potential of Ari Hirvonen’s work. In this intervention I return to some of the themes that his work continuously engages with (such as the question of the limits, transgressions of law, and ethical acts), and re-think them in the context of racial justice. This think-piece opens (...)
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    Politics of the Encounter: Subject and Law between Immanence and Transcendence.Stewart Motha, Simona Rentea & Andreja Zevnik - 2011 - Law and Critique 22 (2):97-100.
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  4. Lacan, Deleuze and the politics of the face.Andreja Zevnik - 2016 - In Boštjan Nedoh & Andreja Zevnik (eds.), Lacan and Deleuze: A Disjunctive Synthesis. Edinburgh: Eup.
  5.  5
    Politics of Perversion: Racialised Difference and Common Good.Andreja Zevnik - 2022 - Filozofski Vestnik 42 (3).
    When anti-racist protestors toppled the statue of Edward Colston in Bristol in June 2020, British political elites across the left-rights spectrum, despite acknowledging that a statue of a slave trader has no place in the contemporary politics, called to firm the application of law and order. Through the example of Edward Colston, the essay examines what Lacan’s idea of perversion can reveal about the power relations between political elites and anti-racist protestors. It opens by discussing the impossibility of ethics in (...)
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