Results for 'Rupture'

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  1.  5
    La rupture du sens commun: Deleuze, lecteur de Kant.Pablo Pachilla - 2020 - Paris: L'Harmattan.
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  2.  3
    Crisis, rupture and anxiety: an interdisciplinary examination of contemporary and historical human challenges.Will Jackson (ed.) - 2012 - Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    Crisis, Rupture and Anxiety: An Interdisciplinary Examination of Contemporary and Historical Human Challenges brings together a range of original contributions that seek to critically interrogate the concept of 'crisis', a seemingly omnipresent and defining metonym of our times. Both international and interdisciplinary in perspective, the leading doctoral scholars and early-career researchers represented in this volume unsettle hegemonic notions of crisis (and possible remedies) by exploring both a very wide range of extant crises (in and of politics, economics, communities, technologies, (...)
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  3.  21
    Ruptured thought: rupture as a critical attitude to nursing research.Kirsten Beedholm, Kirsten Lomborg & Kirsten Frederiksen - 2014 - Nursing Philosophy 15 (2):102-111.
    In this paper, we introduce the notion of ‘rupture’ from the French philosopher Michel Foucault, whose studies of discourse and governmentality have become prominent within nursing research during the last 25 years. We argue that a rupture perspective can be helpful for identifying and maintaining a critical potential within nursing research. The paper begins by introducing rupture as an inheritance from the French epistemological tradition. It then describes how rupture appears in Foucault's works, as both an (...)
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  4.  16
    On Rupture: An Intervention into Epistemological Disruptions of Machiavelli, Hobbes, and Hume.A. T. Kingsmith - 2017 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 31 (4):594-608.
    -rupture /ˈrəpCHər/ ; to breach or disturb a harmonious feeling, situation, or relationship From the Latin ruptura, from rumpere 'to break.' The verb dates from the mid 18th century.To rupture is to break from previously established ways of knowing. It is to trouble what is taken for granted, to reimagine the nature and scope of knowledge. When we speak of rupture, we are speaking of epistemological shifts1—reinscribing what knowledge is, how it can be acquired, and the extent (...)
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  5.  8
    Tangled ruptures: discursive changes in Danish psychiatric nursing 1965–75.Niels Buus - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (4):246-253.
    Tangled ruptures: discursive changes in Danish psychiatric nursing 1965–75Psychiatric nursing and psychiatric nurses have been referred to in various ways over the course of history. These articulations reflect and constitute the ways in which nursing is comprehended during specific periods. A rupture in these descriptions and conceptions of Danish psychiatric nursing over the period 1965–75 is identified using a discourse analytical framework, inspired primarily by Foucault. This rupture influenced all aspects of psychiatric nursing: the perception of the psychiatric (...)
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  6.  14
    Rupturing violent land imaginaries: finding hope through a land titling campaign in Cambodia.Laura Schoenberger & Alice Beban - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (1):301-312.
    In areas of land conflict, fear and the threat of violence work to reproduce imaginaries of land as a resource that powerful people can grab. An urgent question for agrarian scholars and activists is how people can overcome fear so that alternative imaginaries might flourish. In this article, we argue for attention to the affective dimension of imaginaries; ideas of what land is and should be are co-constituted through the material and social, imbued with powerful emotions that enable imaginaries to (...)
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  7.  62
    The Philosophical Rupture Between Fichte and Schelling: Selected Texts and Correspondence (1800-1802).J. G. Fichte, F. W. J. Schelling, Michael G. Vater & David W. Wood - 2012 - State University of New York Press.
    Correspondence and texts by Fichte and Schelling illuminate their thought and the trajectory of their philosophical falling out.
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  8.  26
    Rupture and Response—Rorty, Cavell, and Rancière on the Role of the Poetic Powers of Democratic Citizens in Overcoming Injustices and Oppression.Michael Räber - 2023 - Philosophies 8 (4):62.
    In this paper, I discuss the importance of practices of disidentification and imagination for democratic progress and change. To this end, I bring together certain aspects of Stanley Cavell’s and Richard Rorty’s reflections on democracy, aesthetics, and morality with Jacques Rancière’s account of the importance of appearance for democratic participation. With Rancière, it can be shown that any public–political order always involves the possibility (and often the reality) of exclusion or oppression of those who “have no part” in the current (...)
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  9.  6
    Rupturing Theories of Affect and Film Theory.Terrance H. McDonald - 2016 - Symposium 20 (2):213-228.
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  10.  4
    Rupture anarchiste et trahison proféministe.Léo Thiers-VIdal - 2013 - Lyon: Bambule.
    "La solidarité que je ressentais avec les opprimés, avec ceux qui souffraient, a fait que je me suis spontanément`: tourné vers l'anarchisme - cette théorie qui traite des rapports de domination".
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  11.  10
    Rupture and Continuity: Abortion, the Medical Profession, and the Transitional State—A Polish Case Study.Atina Krajewska - 2021 - Feminist Legal Studies 29 (3):323-350.
    Taking Poland as a case study, this article examines the sociological and historical-institutional factors that determine the relationship between the process of medical professionalisation and reproductive rights in transitional societies. Focusing on three periods in Polish history, (a) Partition era (1772–1918), (b) the Second Polish Republic (1918–1939), and (c) the post-war period (1945–1989), it identifies ruptures and continuities that have shaped the development of the Polish medical profession and its attitude towards abortion care today. Using insights from feminist historical institutionalism, (...)
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  12.  13
    The ethics rupture: exploring alternatives to formal research-ethics review.WillC Van den Hoonaard & Ann Hamilton (eds.) - 2016 - London: University of Toronto Press.
    For decades now, researchers in the social sciences and humanities have been expressing a deep dissatisfaction with the process of research-ethics review in academia. Continuing the ongoing critique of ethics review begun in Will C. van den Hoonard's Walking the Tightrope and The Seduction of Ethics, The Ethics Rupture offers both an account of the system's failings and a series of proposals on how to ensure that social research is ethical, rather than merely compliant with institutional requirements. Containing twenty-five (...)
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  13.  11
    Rupture: On the Emergence of the Political.Paul Eisenstein - 2012 - Northwestern University Press. Edited by Todd McGowan.
    Introduction: the theory of rupture -- Belief -- Universality -- Solidarity -- Equality -- Freedom -- Singularity -- The inhuman -- Conclusion: theorizing from the rubble.
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  14. Afterword : On limits, ruptures, meaning, and meaninglessness.Joel Robbins - 2006 - In Matthew Engelke & Matt Tomlinson (eds.), The limits of meaning: case studies in the anthropology of Christianity. New York: Berghahn Books.
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  15. Linguistic Rupture, Racialization, and Resistance in Latina/Latinx Feminisms: A Critical Phenomenological Approach.Erika Grimm - 2023 - Dissertation, The Pennsylvania State University
    This dissertation offers an account of linguistic practices of Latinx people in the United States through the lens of critical feminist phenomenology. It examines how Latinx people are racialized on the basis of their language use, the normative logics that structure those processes of racialization, and the practices by which Latinx people resist and transform those logics. In this project, I develop a critical feminist phenomenological approach that locates itself within a tradition of Latina feminist phenomenology—a tradition that has prioritized (...)
     
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  16.  3
    Rupture et continuité dans la physique française : Henri Poincaré et les fondements mécaniques de la thermodynamique.João Príncipe - forthcoming - Philosophia Scientiae:153-175.
    Après 1850, la physique moléculaire laplacienne ou ampérienne s’est trouvée en compétition avec d’autres approches impliquant la thermodynamique et les théories cinétiques. Henri Poincaré est l’un des deux seuls savants français qui contribuèrent au développement de la mécanique statistique classique au tournant du siècle. Son ouverture à la physique étrangère et son engagement pour une physique des principes et pour un pluralisme méthodologique marquent une rupture avec l’autosuffisance prétendue de la physique française. Cependant, l’évolution des idées de Poincaré sur (...)
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  17.  17
    Ruptured selves: moral injury and wounded identity.Jonathan M. Cahill, Ashley J. Moyse & Lydia S. Dugdale - 2023 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 26 (2):225-231.
    Moral injury is the trauma caused by violations of deeply held values and beliefs. This paper draws on relational philosophical anthropologies to develop the connection between moral injury and moral identity and to offer implications for moral repair, focusing particularly on healthcare professionals. We expound on the notion of moral identity as the relational and narrative constitution of the self. Moral identity is formed and forged in the context of communities and narrative and is necessary for providing a moral horizon (...)
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  18. Rupture and Transformation: Foucault’s Concept of Spirituality Reconsidered.Jeremy Carrette - 2013 - Foucault Studies 15:52-71.
    Using Foucault’s conceptual frame from The Archaeology of Knowledge to read Foucault’s late deployment of “spirituality,” this article argues that Foucault’s enigmatic gesture in using this concept reveals a refusal of “rupture” from the Christian pre-modern discourse of “spirit.” Despite attempts to alter the “field of use,” Foucault’s genealogical commitment ensures a Christian continuity in modern discourses of transformation. In a detailed examination of the 1982 Collège de France lectures, the article returns Foucault’s use of “spirituality” to the Alexandrian (...)
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  19.  9
    Rupture, repetition, and new rhythms for pandemic times: Mass Observation, everyday life, and COVID-19.Rebecca Coleman & Dawn Lyon - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (2):26-48.
    The COVID-19 pandemic has foregrounded the significance of time to everyday life, as the routines, pace, and speed of social relations were widely reconfigured. This article uses rhythm as an object and tool of inquiry to make sense of spatio-temporal change. We analyse the Mass Observation (MO) directive we co-commissioned on ‘COVID-19 and Time’, where volunteer writers reflect on whether and how time was made, experienced, and imagined differently during the early stages of the pandemic in the UK. We draw (...)
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  20. Rupture, Renewal and Relations: Rosenzweig and Levinas on Co-Presence, Language and Love.Claudia Welz - 2006 - Jahrbuch für Religionsphilosophie 5:69-96.
     
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  21.  35
    The rupture of the social contract in Sade's thought.Mônica Guimarães Teixeira do Amaral - 1992 - Trans/Form/Ação 15:65-83.
    The works of Sade portray the corrupt and libertine practices at the time of Louis XV's despotic regime, invariably referring to the boudoir as a privileged place for the transformation of mind and body as well as for philosophical production. The actuality of Sade's thought lies in the fact that he reveals - as do modem trends - the narcissic constitution of subjectivity that, in its social-political aspect, leads to political conformism. This article aims at presenting Sade's thought as a (...)
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  22.  22
    The Rupture as Ethical Imperative: Reading the Phaedrus through Levinas's Ethics.Kevin Musgrave - 2018 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 51 (3):293-314.
    A question as old as the study of rhetoric itself, how we might conceive of the ethical basis of persuasion, is as pressing an issue today as ever. One of the earliest critiques of rhetoric comes from Plato's Phaedrus, in which rhetoric is likened to lust, seduction, domination, and even rape in its stance toward the other. Indeed, rhetorical scholarship has remained in contestation with these depictions of rhetoric as akin to coercion and violence.1 Unable to shake Plato's damning criticisms, (...)
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  23.  20
    Rupture, Suture, Nietzsche: Impossible Intersubjectivity in Alien.Dominic Lash - 2021 - Film-Philosophy 25 (3):229-250.
    The concept of suture has long been an important and controversial concept in investigations of the relationships between narrative, diegesis, character, and spectator. The dominant understanding of suture has paid more attention to its Lacanian derivation – and to the account given by Daniel Dayan – than to the work of Jean-Pierre Oudart which first introduced suture into Film Studies. This article, however, follows the recent work of George Butte, who argues that the way Oudart understands suture is very illuminating (...)
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  24.  16
    Ruptures and traumas in central European consciousness: Czech history as a test case.Jaroslav Krejci - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):365-376.
  25.  9
    Rupture.Katherine Rand - 2017 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 7 (3):E1-E4.
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  26.  9
    Tradition et modernité: rupture ou continuité?Godefroy Noah Onana - 2016 - Paris: L'Harmattan. Edited by Monique Castillo.
    Pt. 1. Rupture entre la tradition et la modernité -- 1. Condorcet -voltaire -- Introduction -- Courage de se servir de son entendement -- La lutte contre le fanatisme -- La conception voltairienne de Dieu -- L'appel à la tolérance -- La passion antireligieuse -- Le rejet de la métaphysique -- La religion comme superstition -- Conclusion -- 2. Joseph de maistre -- Introduction -- Le rappel du caractere protecteur de la tradition -- L'idée d'ordre -- Le providentialisme -- (...)
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  27.  15
    Sentient Entanglements and Ruptures in the Americas: Human-Animal Relations in the Amazon, Andes, and Arctic.Maggie Bolton & Jan Peter Laurens Loovers (eds.) - 2023 - BRILL.
    This book brings together anthropological studies of human-animal relations among Indigenous Peoples in three regions of the Americas: the Andes, Amazonia and the American Arctic. Through ethnographic essays, the authors illustrate and compare entanglements of human and other-than-human lives.
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  28. On Rupture and Destruction in History.Jd Hondt - 1986 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 15 (4):345-358.
  29.  30
    Royal ruptures: Caroline of Ansbach and the politics of illness in the 1730s.Emrys D. Jones - 2011 - Medical Humanities 37 (1):13-17.
    Caroline of Ansbach, wife of George II, occupied a crucial position in the public life of early 18th-century Britain. She was seen to exert considerable influence on the politics of the court and, as mother to the Hanoverian dynasty's next generation, she became an important emblem for the nation's political well-being. This paper examines how such emblematic significance was challenged and qualified when Caroline's body could no longer be portrayed as healthy and life giving. Using private memoirs and correspondence from (...)
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  30.  2
    Rupture linguistique, déplacement analytique et analyse anthropologique.Albert Doutreloux, Jean Costermans, Guy Jucquois & Antoine Vergote - 1980
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  31. Rupture (flexible accumulation strategies of capitalism and the re-or de-territorialization of capital).M. Grzinic Mauhler - 2002 - Filozofski Vestnik 23 (2):137-154.
  32. Ruptured Thought:: Using Foucault for Nursing Research.Kirsten Beedholm, Kirsten Lomborg & Kirsten Frederiksen - forthcoming - Nursing Philosophy.
     
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  33.  29
    Rupture and Literary Creation in Jean-Paul Sartre [1968].René Girard & Robert Doran - 2015 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 22:1-15.
    Using specific examples drawn from Sartre’s oeuvre, I propose to treat the contemporary problem of critical method—or, more precisely, of critical interpretation—in literary texts. I begin by examining the meaning of Sartre’s The Flies, one of his earliest dramatic works.The themes of the play are easily grouped into pairs of opposing concepts: authenticity versus inauthenticity, lucidity versus bad faith, revolt versus conformism, atheism versus religion, revolution versus reaction, and so on. All these themes appear, and are organized, as a function (...)
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  34.  23
    Storying Ruptures as Educational Practice.Heather Greenhalgh-Spencer & Zofia Zaliwska - 2018 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 38 (1):1-6.
    Haraway foregrounds many stories that we, in a late capitalist era, tell ourselves in order to justify, or not even notice, actions that are harmful to all living things. While I am mindful of Haraway’s excellent attention to the ways that ‘stories tell stories, thoughts think thoughts, and knots knot knots,’ I argue that we must take great care when we, as educators, blur the lines between facts and fiction; reality and art. When everything becomes a story—with some stories simply (...)
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  35. Leibniz ruptured relationship to the metaphysical knowledge of scholasticism.W. Hubener - 1985 - Studia Leibnitiana 17 (1):66-76.
     
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  36.  1
    Ruptures.Nicolas Franck - 2020 - L’Enseignement Philosophique 70 (2):3-6.
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  37.  23
    Ruptures in Separate Spheres: Deconstruction of Cross-Gender Solidarity in George Noyes Miller's The Strike of a Sex and Annie Denton Cridge's Man's Rights.Justyna Galant - 2018 - Utopian Studies 29 (2):176-196.
    The nineteenth century was the time of the emergence of the concept of solidarity, which "to an extent replaced [the older term fraternity],"1 as well as of a dramatic increase in utopian thinking and writing.2 A notable place among the impressive body of utopian literature of the era belongs to feminist and antifeminist visions of alternative futures, especially from 1860s onward, which Lewes links with "middle class women's overwhelming frustration... with the apparent failure of the suffrage movement."3 The concept of (...)
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  38.  38
    A radical rupture in the paradigm of modern medicine: Conflicts of interest, fiduciary obligations, and the scientific ideal.George Khushf - 1998 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 23 (1):98 – 122.
    Conflicts of interest serve as a cipher for a radical rupture in the Flexnerian paradigm of medicine, and they can only be addressed if we recognize that health care is now practiced by institutions, not just individual physicians. By showing how "appropriate utilization of services" or "that which is medically indicated" is a function of socioeconomic factors related to institutional responsibilities, I point toward an administrative and organizational ethic as a needed component for addressing conflicts of interest. The argument (...)
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  39. Crises, ruptures, mutations in religious traditions.Jacques Etienne - 2006 - Revue Théologique de Louvain 37 (3):409-412.
     
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  40.  8
    Towards an epistemology of ruptures: the case of Heidegger and Foucault: issues in phenomenology and hermeneutics.Arun Iyer - 2014 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    By systematically uncovering and comprehensively examining the epistemological implications of Heidegger's history of being and Foucault's archaeology of discursive formations, Towards an Epistemology of Ruptures shows how Heidegger and Foucault significantly expand the notions of knowledge and thought. This is done by tracing their path-breaking responses to the question: What is the object of thought? The book shows how for both thinkers thought is not just the act by which the object is represented in an idea, and knowledge not just (...)
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  41.  12
    Rupture.Delia Popa - 2019 - Studia Phaenomenologica 19:362-365.
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  42.  3
    Rupturing the Spectacle: On Certain Paradoxes of Film Image.Adrian Pelc - 2020 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 40 (3):457-476.
    In this paper, confronted are two radical currents of thought about the film image. In a first step, demonstrated is how some Marxist theorists define the film image as ontologically grounded in alienation and the destruction of non-mediated presence due to its technical origin, as well as its effects. In a second step, I try to show how André Bazin, influenced by phenomenology and taking up identical premises as the Marxists, came to diametrically opposite conclusions: it isn’t but the film (...)
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  43.  14
    Generative Ruptures and Moments of Confluence.Helen Verran - 2019 - Journal of World Philosophies 4 (2):55-60.
    What happens when a gallery space dedicated to exhibiting European art is interrupted by introducing African art objects? This essay reviews a temporary exhibition that introduced works of art from Africa, the property of Berlin’s Ethnologisches Museum, into the exhibition space of the Bode Museum, whose collection consists of European art objects from the Classical to the Baroque periods. I offer a reading that is quite different than the curators’, proposing art museums as institutions where philosophies are expressed in the (...)
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  44. Retroactive rupture: the place of the subject in Jane Campion's In the cut.Fabio Vighi - 2016 - In Sheila Kunkle (ed.), Cinematic cuts: theorizing film endings. Albany: SUNY Press.
     
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  45. Ruptures and overlappings of experience.Bernhard Waldenfels - 2008 - Filosoficky Casopis 56 (1):29-44.
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  46.  16
    Rupturing the Dialectic.Harry Cleaver - 2018 - Dialogue and Universalism 28 (3):11-53.
    In a period in which capital has been on the offensive for many years, using debt and financial crises as rationales for wielding austerity to hammer down wages and social services and terrorism as an excuse for attacking civil liberties, it is important to realize that the origins of this long period of crisis lay in the struggles of people to free their lives from the endless subordination to work within a society organized as a gigantic social factory. In both (...)
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  47.  30
    Ruptures dans l'Empire, puissance de l'exode.Giuseppe Cocco & Maurizio Lazzarato - 2001 - Multitudes 4 (4):75-84.
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  48.  17
    Ruptures within Empire, the Power of Exodus: Interview with Toni Negri.Giuseppe Cocco & Maurizio Lazzarato - 2002 - Theory, Culture and Society 19 (4):187-194.
  49.  9
    Ruptures Within Empire, the Power of Exodus.Giuseppe Cocco & Maurizio Lazzarato - 2002 - Theory, Culture and Society 19 (4):187-194.
  50.  11
    Dialogic Ruptures: An Ethical Imperative.Sonja Arndt - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (9):909-921.
    Dialogue is promoted as a key strategy to ‘solve’ the ‘problem’ of diversity in educational settings. Yet, “[w]hen we select words … We usually take them from other utterances, and mainly from utterances that are kindred to ours in genre, that is in theme, composition or style”. This article problematises the complexities of dialogic engagements with foreigner teachers in educational encounters. Bakhtin’s treatment of polyphonic dialogic encounters provides an analytical frame for explicating the intertextuality of foreigner teacher engagements as not (...)
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