Beyond the Philosopher's Fear: A Cavellian Reading of Gender, Origin and Religion in Modern SkepticismRoutledge, 5 de dez. de 2016 - 188 páginas Based on a detailed analysis of gender in Stanley Cavell's treatment of the skeptical problem, this book addresses the relationship between gender and religion in modern skepticism. Engaging in dialogue with Julia Kristeva's philosophy, Viefhues claims that a religious problem underlies Cavell's understanding of the feminine. The feminine which the skeptic fears is construed as a placeholder for the beyond, marking the transcendence of our origins which are elusive yet at the same time part of ourselves. It is argued that a religious question of origins thus lies at the heart of the modern skeptical problem. |
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... important for contemporary philosophy, why should philosophers care about his reflections on the feminine, and how does religion become an issue for his thinking? To address these questions I will first say something about Introduction.
... important for contemporary philosophy, why should philosophers care about his reflections on the feminine, and how does religion become an issue for his thinking? To address these questions I will first say something about Introduction.
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... become the site of violence. The dangerous and fulfilling liaisons of heterosexual couples provide therefore (and not surprisingly) the examples for Cavell's analysis of the perils and promises of language use. Similarly, the desire for ...
... become the site of violence. The dangerous and fulfilling liaisons of heterosexual couples provide therefore (and not surprisingly) the examples for Cavell's analysis of the perils and promises of language use. Similarly, the desire for ...
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... become, something other than we are, or take ourselves for; that our origins as human beings need accounting for, and are unaccountable [CR, p. 418, italics added] The skeptical impulse is thus best understood as a desire to recoil from ...
... become, something other than we are, or take ourselves for; that our origins as human beings need accounting for, and are unaccountable [CR, p. 418, italics added] The skeptical impulse is thus best understood as a desire to recoil from ...
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... become questionable.'15 It is certainly questionable whether the authority of ' religion ' tout court has become questionable for everyone ; yet reading Cavell while hearing Kristeva will disclose in Cavell's project of transforming the ...
... become questionable.'15 It is certainly questionable whether the authority of ' religion ' tout court has become questionable for everyone ; yet reading Cavell while hearing Kristeva will disclose in Cavell's project of transforming the ...
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Conteúdo
From Criteria to Projection | |
What Makes | |
Privacy and Public | |
Emersonian Authorship as the Office of | |
Beyond the Singing Body? Gender and Skepticism | |
Nostalgia for Mothers | |
A Theological History of Skepticism | |
A New Religious Imagination for the Morning | |
Bibliography | |
Outras edições - Ver todos
Beyond the Philosopher's Fear: A Cavellian Reading of Gender, Origin and ... Ludger H. Viefhues-Bailey Visualização parcial - 2007 |
Termos e frases comuns
absence accept according to Cavell acknowledge attunement aversion becoming Cavell describes Cavell writes Cavell's Cavellian Claim of Reason Comedies of Remarriage connection context created creation descartes desdemona desire diva Emerson Emersonian experience exposure expression fact fantasy fear female feminine film Freudian G.E.M. Anscombe gender Greta Garbo Happened One Night Hilary Putnam ibid idea implies inner interpretation Jonte-Pace jouissance judgments Julia Kristeva knowledge linguistic live male marriage masculine means Melancholia melodrama metaphysical mind mother mourning Mulhall mutual narcissism nature normativity object ordinary origins Othello pain philosophical philosophical skepticism picture possible present problem Psychoanalysis Putnam question reflects relationship religion religious imagination rules semiotic sense separation sexual skeptical worry society soul speak Stanley Cavell Stephen Mulhall symbolic theological things toothache understand University Press violence voice Wittgenstein Wittgensteinian criteria women words