Results for 'Claire Lauer'

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  1. What's in a Name? The Anatomy of Defining New/Multi/Modal/Digital/Media Texts.Claire Lauer - 2012 - Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy 17 (1):n1.
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  2.  8
    Disentrenching Experiment: The Construction of GM—Crop Field Trials As a Social Problem.Claire Marris, Pierre-Benoit Joly & Christophe Bonneuil - 2008 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 33 (2):201-229.
    The paper investigates how field experimentation of genetically modified crops became central to the French controversy on genetically modified organisms in recent years. Initially constructed in the 1980s as a cognitive endeavor to be preserved from lay interference, field trials of genetically modified crops were reconceived as “an intrusion in the social space,” which had to be negotiated with actors from that space. In order to analyze this transformation, the authors suggest that it is necessary to develop an interpretive framework (...)
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  3. Gilles Deleuze.Claire Colebrook - 2017 - In Adam Kotsko & Carlo Salzani (eds.), Agamben's Philosophical Lineage. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
     
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  4.  12
    Introduction.Claire Colebrook - 2006 - Feminist Theory 7 (2):131-142.
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  5.  4
    Introduction to, Preferences and Rational Choice: New Perspectives and Legal Implications.Matthew D. Adler, Claire Finkelstein & Peter Huang - unknown
  6. Concluding Conversation: De-centring Science Diplomacy – CORRIGENDUM.Gordon Barrett, Claire Edington, Aya Homei, Kate Sullivan de Estrada & Zuoyue Wang - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-1.
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    Feminism and Autonomy: The Crisis of the Self-Authoring Subject.Claire Colebrook - 1997 - Body and Society 3 (2):21-41.
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  8.  22
    Probing Representations of Gymnastics Movements: A Visual Priming Study.Claire Calmels, Marc Elipot & Lionel Naccache - 2018 - Cognitive Science 42 (5):1529-1551.
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  9.  8
    Husserl, Frege and 'the paradox'.Claire Hill - 2000 - Manuscrito 23 (2):101-132.
    In letters that Husserl and Frege exchanged during late 1906 and early 1907, when it is thought that Frege abandoned his attempts to solve Russell's paradox, Husserl expressed his views about the "paradox". Studied here are three deep-rooted differences between their approaches to pure logic present beneath the surface in these letters. These differences concern Husserl's ideas about avoiding paradoxical consequences by shunning three potentially para-dox producing practices. Specifically, he saw the need for: 1) correctly drawing the line between meaning (...)
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  10. Finalités de la nature et poésie descriptive.Claire Jaquier - 2012 - In Adrien Paschoud & Nathalie Vuillemin (eds.), Penser l'ordre naturel, 1680-1810. Oxford: Voltaire Foundation.
  11.  25
    The Play of the World: The End, the Great Outdoors, the Outside, Alterity and the Real.Claire Colebrook - 2016 - Derrida Today 9 (1):21-35.
    Both in his earliest debates with thinkers such as Foucault and Levinas, and in later critiques of political immediacy, Derrida invoked the inescapable burden of a necessary but impossible universalism. By raising the stakes so high it would seem that deconstruction generates hyperbolic conceptions of ethics and justice, but also precludes any form of day to day political positivity. In this essay I pursue the seemingly less ‘ethical’ conception of play in Derrida's work to argue for a multiple universalism.
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  12.  24
    Sex and the (Anthropocene) City.Claire Mary Colebrook - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (2-3):39-60.
    In this essay I explore three concepts: sex, the city, and the Anthropocene. I argue that the condition for the possibility of the city is the assemblage of sexual drives for the sake of relative stability, but that those same drives also exceed the city's self-preservative function. Further, I argue that the very conditions that further the city and that enable philosophical and scientific concepts to be formed rely upon a geological politics that enables new ways of thinking about what (...)
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  13.  12
    Introduction: Anthropocene Feminisms: Rethinking the Unthinkable.Claire Colebrook & Jami Weinstein - 2015 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 5 (2):167-178.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:IntroductionAnthropocene Feminisms: Rethinking the UnthinkableClaire Colebrook and Jami WeinsteinIn her recent lecture on the Anthropocene (to which she adds the Capitalocene and the Chthulucene), Donna Haraway expresses some alarm that after two major insights into what counts as thinkable, it was “anthropos” that became the term for the post-Holocene (Haraway 2014). Haraway declares, with emphasis, that it is “literally unthinkable” to work with the individual unit of “man” if (...)
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  14.  26
    Humanist Posthumanism, Becoming-Woman and the Powers of the ‘Faux’.Claire Colebrook - 2022 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 16 (3):379-401.
    Feminist and post-colonial theorists have embraced Deleuze and Guattari’s terminology of becoming-woman and nomadism, and have done so despite criticisms that these terms appropriate the struggles of real women and stateless persons. The force of the real has become especially acute in the twenty-first century in the wake of neoliberal mobilisations of feminism as yet one more marketing tool. Rather than repeat the criticism that identity politics deflects attention from real political struggles, we can see terms such as ‘becoming-woman’ as (...)
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  15.  3
    Elite Girls' Schooling, Social Class and Sexualised Popular Culture.Claire Charles - 2013 - Routledge.
    Young women’s identities are an issue of public and academic interest across a number of western nations at the present time. This book explores how young women attending an elite school for girls understand and construct ‘empowerment’. It investigates the extent to which, and the ways in which, their constructions of empowerment and identity work to overturn, or resist, key regulations and normative expectations for girls in post-feminist, hyper-sexualised cultural contexts. The book provides a succinct overview of feminist theorisations of (...)
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  16. Donner écho au Discours de Ratisbonne du pape Benoît XVI.Claire Clivaz - 2019 - In Gabriele Palasciano (ed.), Dieu, la raison et l'épée: perspectives œcuméniques sur le Discours de Ratisbonne. Paris: L'Harmattan.
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  17. Deleuze after Afro-pessimism.Claire Colebrook - 2022 - In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald (eds.), From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  18. Deleuze after Afro-pessimism.Claire Colebrook - 2022 - In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald (eds.), From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  19.  6
    Destroying cosmopolitanism for the sake of the cosmos.Claire Colebrook - 2012 - In Rosi Braidotti, Patrick Hanafin & Bolette Blaagaard (eds.), After cosmopolitanism. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, a Glasshouse book. pp. 166.
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  20. Dynamic potentiality: the body that stands alone.Claire Colebrook - 2010 - In Elena Tzelepis & Athena Athanasiou (eds.), Rewriting Difference: Luce Irigaray and "the Greeks". State University of New York Press.
  21.  21
    Ethics and Representation: From Kant to Post-structuralism.Claire Colebrook - 1999
    Ethics and Representationprovides a critique and overview of contemporary post-structuralist theory. Exploring the Kantian and phenomenological background of Derrida, Deleuze, Foucault, and Irigaray, this book raises some key questions and issues in critical theory. These questions are looked at from a number of angles including the notion of point of view and perspective, the critique of anthropologism from Kant to Deleuze, and the relation between representation and modernity. This is an original contribution to ethical and critical theory which situates poststructuralism (...)
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  22.  9
    Felix Culpa, Dialectic and Becoming-Imperceptible.Claire Colebrook - 2023 - In Tilottama Rajan & Daniel Whistler (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of German Idealism and Poststructuralism. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 449-464.
    Deleuze’s sense of the history of philosophy in Difference and Repetition is manifestly agonistic and counter-dialectic. Against a history of philosophy that has only considered difference as a relation between or among competing terms, Deleuze affirms a philosophy of immanence where the task of philosophy is to think difference in itself. This ‘overcoming’ of Hegel (and Plato) nevertheless intensifies rather than vanquishes Hegel’s own demand for immanence: philosophy is not one event among others, but the necessary means through which life (...)
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  23.  26
    Fire, Flood and Pestilence as the Condition for the Possibility of the Human.Claire Colebrook - 2020 - Derrida Today 13 (2):135-141.
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  24.  6
    1 Face Race.Claire Colebrook - 2012 - In Arun Saldanha & Jason Michael Adams (eds.), Deleuze and Race. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 35-50.
  25.  12
    Framing the End of the Species.Claire Colebrook - 2013 - Symploke 21 (1-2):51.
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  26.  16
    Fast Violence, Revolutionary Violence: Black Lives Matter and the 2020 Pandemic.Claire Colebrook - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (4):495-499.
    The 2020 pandemic cannot be divorced from the problem, pace, and spectacle of race, both because of the racial rhetoric regarding the origins of the virus and because of the subsequent racial injustice in the distribution of healthcare. This paper adds the concept of fast violence to Rob Nixon’s “slow violence” to look at the intersection between the climate of the planet and the climate of racial injustice.
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  27.  4
    12 Gilles Deleuze.Claire Colebrook - 2017 - In Adam Kotsko & Carlo Salzani (eds.), Agamben's Philosophical Lineage. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 131-137.
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  28.  3
    Introduction Part I.Claire Colebrook - 2019 - In Claire Colebrook & Jami Weinstein (eds.), Deleuze and Gender: Deleuze Studies Volume 2: 2008. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 1-19.
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  29. In the beginning was America.Claire Colebrook - 2018 - In David Hancock, Anthony Faramelli & Robert G. White (eds.), Spaces of crisis and critique: heterotopias beyond Foucault. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  30.  11
    Is There Something Wrong With the Task of Thinking?Claire Colebrook - 2020 - Environmental Philosophy 17 (1):39-58.
    One way to approach the widely acknowledged failure to act on climate change would be to turn to the philosophical tradition, going back to Kant at least, that diagnoses all the internal impediments to thinking. It is with Heidegger, however, that thinking is curiously divided between a disclosure of the world, and the world’s occlusion. Rather than pursue Heidegger’s project of destroying throught’s accretions and returning to the world I will argue that it is the very concept of ‘thinking’ in (...)
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  31.  6
    Jacques Derrida: Key Concepts.Claire Colebrook (ed.) - 2014 - Routledge.
    Jacques Derrida: Key Concepts presents a broad overview and engagement with the full range of Derrida's work - from the early phenomenological thinking to his preoccupations with key themes, such as technology, psychoanalysis, friendship, Marxism, racism and sexism, to his ethico-political writings and his deconstruction of democracy. Presenting both an examination of the key concepts central to his thinking and a broader study of how that thinking shifted over a lifetime, the book offers the reader a clear, systematic and fresh (...)
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  32.  3
    Jean-Luc Nancy.Claire Colebrook - 2009 - In Felicity Colman (ed.), Film, Theory and Philosophy: The Key Thinkers. Acumen Publishing. pp. 154-163.
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  33.  34
    Grown-upness or living philosophically?Claire Cassidy - 2017 - Childhood and Philosophy 13 (28).
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  34.  19
    Feasibility of the music therapy assessment tool for awareness in disorders of consciousness (MATADOC) for use with pediatric populations.Wendy L. Magee, Claire M. Ghetti & Alvin Moyer - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:139277.
    Measuring responsiveness to gain accurate diagnosis in populations with disorders of consciousness (DOC) is of central concern because these patients have such complex clinical presentations. Due to the uncertainty of accuracy for both behavioral and neurophysiological measures in DOC, combined assessment approaches are recommended. A number of standardized behavioral measures can be used with adults with DOC with minor to moderate reservations relating to the measures’ psychometric properties and clinical applicability. However, no measures have been standardized for use with pediatric (...)
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  35.  4
    Pratiques de danse et discours de genre, une histoire connectée.Elizabeth Claire - 2017 - Clio 46:7-18.
    En 1797, un article du Journal des Luxus und der Moden fustige une nouvelle pratique de danse, « bacchanale » prisée par les habitantes de Breslau qui pivotent « comme une figure androgyne déformée » où les pieds « suppriment toute beauté » avec leur « enthousiasme ivre ». Quelques années plus tard, dans ses « Lettres d’un médecin », le rédacteur en chef de la Gazette de santé déplore une forme de lutte entre les sexes qui touche à l’« (...)
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  36.  16
    Vulnerable Voices: An examination of the concept of vulnerability in relation to student voice.Denise Claire Batchelor - 2006 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 38 (6):787-800.
    Vulnerable student voices are a matter for concern in contemporary higher education, but that concern is directed more towards identifying vulnerable groups, and seeking to widen their participation in higher education. It is less to do with the vulnerability of certain modes of voice when students are there. The concept of student voice may be anatomised into three constituent elements: an epistemological voice, or a voice for knowing, a practical voice, or a voice for doing, and an ontological voice, or (...)
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  37.  20
    Rethinking philosophy for children: Agamben and education as pure means.Claire Cassidy - 2023 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (3):774-779.
    There are many texts that present and discuss Philosophy with Children, the majority of which focus on Matthew Lipman’s Philosophy for Children (P4C) programme.
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  38.  21
    When is a child not a child? Child soldiers in international law.Claire Breen - 2007 - Human Rights Review 8 (2):71-103.
    International humanitarian law and international human rights law both prohibit the use of child soldiers in armed conflict. The protection afforded to children is problematic because the age a child may become a soldier and what constitutes child “soldiering” fluctuates between States and cultures. Differing levels of children soldiers’ protection leave them vulnerable to particular abuses. This paper examines some different attitudes and approaches towards the use of child soldiers and concludes that international human rights law and international humanitarian law (...)
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  39.  13
    Questioning Representation.Claire Colebrook - 2000 - Substance 29 (2):47-67.
  40.  3
    Threats and preemptive practices.Claire Finkelstein - 1999 - Legal Theory 5 (3):311-338.
  41.  30
    Balancing Beneficence and Autonomy.Claire D. Clark & Michael F. Weaver - 2015 - American Journal of Bioethics 15 (7):62-63.
  42.  19
    Feminist Engagements in Democratic Theory.Noëulle McAfee & R. Claire Snyder - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (4):vii-x.
  43.  21
    Feminist Engagements in Democratic Theory.Noëulle McAfee & R. Claire Snyder - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (4):vii-x.
  44.  3
    The Stirrings of a Stubborn and Difficult Freedom: Assimilation, Education, and Levinas’s Crisis of Humanism.Claire Katz - 2010 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 18 (1):86-105.
    In several places, Levinas identifies the problem that concerns him as a “ crisis of humanism.” This problem finds its seeds in modernity but comes to fruition in the inhumanities of the 20 th century. Like his philosophical predecessors, Levinas offers an educational model as a solution to a problem he has identified. But this model--Jewish education—is uniquely different from those offered by those who came before him. This essay examines Levinas‘s interest in Jewish education as a solution to this (...)
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  45.  8
    Offshore wind farms and commercial fisheries in the uk: A study in stakeholder consultation.Tim Gray, Claire Haggett & Derek Bell - 2005 - Ethics, Place and Environment 8 (2):127 – 140.
    This paper is an exploration of a current environmental issue dividing two industries in the UK. The issue is offshore wind farms, and the industries are commercial fishing and wind energy. The controversy over offshore wind farms highlights three core issues of conflict: the adequacy of stakeholder consultation processes; the right to compensation for loss of livelihood; and the lack of adequate data. We find that the characterisations that developers, regulators, and fishers hold of each other critically inform their positions (...)
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  46.  6
    Physical and Psychological Childbirth Experiences and Early Infant Temperament.Carmen Power, Claire Williams & Amy Brown - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    ObjectiveTo examine how physical and psychological childbirth experiences affect maternal perceptions and experiences of early infant behavioural style.BackgroundUnnecessary interventions may disturb the normal progression of physiological childbirth and instinctive neonatal behaviours that facilitate mother–infant bonding and breastfeeding. While little is known about how a medicalised birth may influence developing infant temperament, high impact interventions which affect neonatal crying and cortisol levels could have longer term consequences for infant behaviour and functioning.MethodsA retrospective Internet survey was designed to fully explore maternal experiences (...)
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  47.  11
    A Globe of One's Own: In Praise of the Flat Earth.Claire Colebrook - 2012 - Substance 41 (1):30-39.
  48.  1
    Happiness, Theoria, and Everyday Life.Claire Colebrook - 2003 - Symploke 11 (1):132-151.
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  49.  1
    Towards a Redefinition of the Role of the Arts in Education: Extrapolations from Ernest Gellner's Plough, Sword, and Book.Claire Detels - forthcoming - Philosophy of Music Education Review 9 (2):11-18.
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    The Context of the Stewart–Prevost Correspondence.Claire Etchegaray, Knud Haakonssen, Daniel Schulthess, David Stauffer & Paul Wood - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (1):5-18.
    Summary The correspondence in this issue of History of European Ideas has not previously been published. It is the surviving part of the epistolary exchange between Dugald Stewart and the Genevan professor and man of letters Pierre Prevost (1751?1839) from the 1790s to the 1820s. To this are added several closely connected letters to and from their associates. This correspondence is striking evidence of the republic of letters continuing to flourish in the aftermath of the French Revolution, illustrating the transmission (...)
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