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Sasha L. Biro
Marist College
  1.  11
    Disrupting Symmetry: Jean-Luc Nancy and Luce Irigaray on Myth and the Violence of Representation.Sasha L. Biro - 2019 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 3 (2):62-74.
    Through myths that pattern and repeat we figure the world to ourselves. The desire to be done with myth, to surpass mythic thinking in favor of a “more” rational way of thinking, is but one way of perpetrating violence in the guise of similitude. The rejection of muthos by logos is itself a form of violence, with significant ramifications. The following analysis will explore the work of Luce Irigaray’s Speculum of the Other Woman, and Jean-Luc Nancy’s Inoperative Community, focusing on (...)
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  2.  17
    Levinas's Reception of the Mythic.Sasha L. Biro - 2017 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 31 (3):422-431.
    Levinas's project throughout Totality and Infinity and in his earlier works Existence and Existents and Time and the Other is to situate the primacy of the ethical as foundational first philosophy. For Levinas, myth is intimately connected to being, the being before reflection and thought. The entering into reflection and thought Levinas terms transcendence, the epoché, or first ethical gesture. In order to situate his ethics, Levinas turns to the Cartesian notion of infinity: the idea of infinity as an overflowing (...)
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  3.  23
    Reading in a Time of Crisis in advance.Sasha L. Biro - forthcoming - Teaching Philosophy.