8 found
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Philip Beitchman [6]Phil Beitchman [4]
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Philip Beitchman
Medgar Evers College (CUNY)
  1.  27
    Simulations.Phil Beitchman, Paul Foss & Paul Patton (eds.) - 1983 - Semiotext(E).
    Simulations never existed as a book before it was "translated" into English. Actually it came from two different bookCovers written at different times by Jean Baudrillard. The first part of Simulations, and most provocative because it made a fiction of theory, was "The Procession of Simulacra." It had first been published in Simulacre et Simulations. The second part, written much earlier and in a more academic mode, came from L'Echange Symbolique et la Mort. It was a half-earnest, half-parodical attempt to (...)
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  2.  19
    I Am a Process with No Subject.Philip Barnard & Philip Beitchman - 1991 - Substance 20 (2):101.
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  3.  11
    Forget Foucault.Phil Beitchman, Nicole Dufresne, Lee Hildreth & Mark Polizzotti (eds.) - 2007 - Semiotext(E).
    In 1976, Jean Baudrillard sent this essay to the French magazine Critique, where Michel Foucault was an editor. Foucault was asked to reply, but remained silent. Forget Foucault made Baudrillard instantly infamous in France. It was a devastating revisitation of Foucault's recent History of Sexuality--and of his entire oeuvre--and also an attack on those philosophers, like Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, who believed that desire could be revolutionary. In Baudrillard's eyes, desire and power were interchangeable, so desire had no place (...)
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  4.  16
    Fatal Strategies.Phil Beitchman & W. G. J. Niesluchowski (eds.) - 2008 - Semiotext(E).
    When Fatal Strategies was first published in French in 1983, it represented a turning point for Jean Baudrillard: an utterly original, and for many readers, utterly bizarre book that offered a theory as proliferative, ecstatic, and hallucinatory as the postmodern world it endeavored to describe. Arguing against the predetermined outcomes of dialectical thought with his renowned, wry, ambivalent passion, with this volume Jean Baudrillard mounted an attack against the "false problems" posed by Western philosophy. If his Marxist days were firmly (...)
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  5.  11
    The Aesthetics of Disappearance.Phil Beitchman (ed.) - 1980 - Los Angeles, CA: Semiotext(E).
    Virilio himself referred to his 1980 work The Aesthetics of Disappearance as a "juncture" in his thinking, one at which he brought his focus onto the logistics of perception -- a logistics he would soon come to refer to as the "vision machine." If Speed and Politics established Virilio as the inaugural -- and still consummate -- theorist of "dromology", The Aesthetics of Disappearance introduced his understanding of "picnolepsy" -- the epileptic state of consciousness produced by speed, or rather, the (...)
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  6.  19
    The Fragmentary Word.Philip Beitchman - 1983 - Substance 12 (2):58.
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  7.  2
    The play of the world and the expiation of the real: acts, approaches, inebriations.Philip Beitchman - 2015 - Bethesda: Academica Press.
    Dr.Beitchman has created a variety, a plethora of interconnections and links and lines that connect many seemingly unconnectable literary elements and forms. Take for example the two political chapters...the first Shakespeare's King John and the last Jean Baudrillard's vision of 9/11; both deal with periods of crisis and loss of confidence/credibility of and in society conjuring a derangement that has become a syndrome. Drugs and literature connect Coleridge and Burroughs/ Kublai Khan and Naked Lunch and they in turn connect with (...)
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  8.  6
    The poverty of philosophy: readings in non and other philosophies or arts of immanence.Philip Beitchman (ed.) - 2023 - Lanham: Hamilton Books, an imprint of Rowman & Littlefield.
    The Poverty of Philosophy: Readings in Non and Other Philosophies and Arts of Imminence includes an 8,000 word overture, "Poverty of Philosophy" introducing non-philosophy and its progenitor, François Laruelle.
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