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  • {| align="[[right]]" style="line-height:2.0em;margin-left:10px;align:right;text-align:right;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aaa" | [[French]]: ''[[imaginaire]]''
    7 KB (985 words) - 00:10, 25 May 2019
  • {| align="[[right]]" style="line-height:2.0em;text-align:right;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aaa" ...almost intolerable level of [[excitation]]. Due to the specificity of the French term, it is usually [[left]] untranslated.
    36 KB (5,474 words) - 04:45, 29 July 2021
  • ...can|Seminar on 'The Purloined Letter']]", trans. Jeffrey Mehlman, ''Yale [[French]] Studies'', 48 (1972): 38-72.</ref> It is in this paper that [[Lacan]] pr ...the [[analyst]] must read the [[analysand]]'s [[speech]] as if it were a [[text]], "taking it literally" (''prendre à la lettre'').
    6 KB (844 words) - 00:47, 26 May 2019
  • {| align="[[right]]" style="line-height:2.0em;text-align:right;margin-left: 10px;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aa | [[French]]: ''[[symbolique]]''
    8 KB (1,124 words) - 00:13, 21 May 2019
  • ...padding="2" cellspacing="5" align="center" style="border:1px solid #aaaaaa;text-align:center;margin:6px -8px;align:center;vertical-align:top;width:90%;back |style="text-align:center;color:#000;line-height:2em;width:100%;";|
    27 KB (4,091 words) - 21:55, 27 May 2019
  • ...cant impact on [[critical theory]], [[literary theory]], twentieth-century French philosophy, [[sociology]], [[feminist]] theory and [[clinical]] psychoanaly {| style="line-height:1.5em;valign:top;width:50%;text-align:left;"
    13 KB (1,795 words) - 17:56, 3 June 2019
  • {| style="line-height:2.0em;width:100%;text-align:justify;" {| width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="text-align:justify;vertical-align:top;background-color:#ffffff"
    4 KB (592 words) - 08:47, 24 May 2019
  • [[French]] [[psychoanalysts]] have preferred to address the successive description o ...When two people interact, both are affected in ways not captured by the "[[text]]" of the conversation. The effects on [[speaker]] and listener are differe
    31 KB (4,666 words) - 10:21, 1 June 2019
  • {| align="[[right]]" style="margin-left:10px;line-height:2.0em;text-align:justify;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aaa" | [[French]]: ''[[pulsion]]''
    9 KB (1,353 words) - 06:05, 24 May 2019
  • ...the lecture on Joyce's Ulysses by Valéry Larbaud with readings from the [[text]], an [[event]] organized by La maison des amis des livres, and at which [[ ...f the Société Psychanalytique de Paris (SPP), the first association of [[French]] [[psychoanalysts]].
    82 KB (12,528 words) - 20:43, 25 May 2019
  • ...urt [[School]]. A different [[tradition]] is revealed in an essay by the [[French]] post-[[structuralist]] Michel Pêcheux, while the study of ideology is ex {| style="width:100%; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"
    3 KB (397 words) - 19:06, 20 May 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1956 - 1957
    15 KB (2,211 words) - 16:10, 30 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1957 - 1958
    13 KB (1,942 words) - 16:23, 30 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1958 - 1959
    12 KB (1,768 words) - 16:18, 30 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1960 - 1961
    12 KB (1,665 words) - 16:21, 30 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:1.5em; padding-left:3px;"| 1960 - 1961
    17 KB (2,258 words) - 17:05, 27 December 2020
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1962 - 1963
    15 KB (2,146 words) - 05:15, 4 July 2019
  • Such a [[list]] may seem quite [[natural]]; my purpose is to prove that the [[text]] was written to show that it is not as natural as that." [[French]]: (texte établi par Jacques-[[Alain]] [[Miller]]), [[Paris]]: Seuil, 1973
    8 KB (1,250 words) - 02:22, 21 May 2019
  • {| width="100%" align="center" style="width:700px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:30px;" [[French]]: unpublished.<br>
    12 KB (1,753 words) - 16:24, 30 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1956 - 1957
    10 KB (1,453 words) - 16:30, 30 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | 1968 - 1969
    11 KB (1,764 words) - 12:35, 2 March 2021
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:150px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | [[{{Y}}|1953 - 1954]]
    13 KB (1,956 words) - 12:33, 2 March 2021
  • ...Freud himself was less expansive about it: during the composition of the [[text]], Freud's cancer was painful and required care, and Max Schur became his p ...ons, into one great [[unity]], the unity of mankind" (p. 122). This is the text in which Freud best [[defends]] and illustrates the analogy, even the [[ide
    11 KB (1,706 words) - 20:22, 27 May 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | 1963 - 1964
    16 KB (2,456 words) - 12:15, 2 March 2021
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | 1954 - 1955
    14 KB (2,101 words) - 12:47, 2 March 2021
  • {| align="center" style="width:500px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:center; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1972 - 1973
    19 KB (2,665 words) - 15:24, 7 July 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1967 - 1968
    10 KB (1,606 words) - 16:31, 30 June 2019
  • ...study of culture and established a communication model for the study of [[text]] semiotics. He also introduced the concept of the [[semiosphere]]. Among h ...ts]] regardless of [[modality (Semiotics)|modality]]. For these purposes, "text" is any [[message]] preserved in a form whose [[existence]] is independent
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • {| style="line-height:2.0em;text-align:justify;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aaa" ...have in isolation; this effect is to act as a "releasing [[mechanism]]" ([[French]]: ''déclencheur'') which triggers certain [[instinct]]ual responses, such
    3 KB (374 words) - 08:34, 24 May 2019
  • '''Roland Barthes''' (November 12, 1915 &ndash; March 25, 1980) was a [[French]] [[literary critic]], [[literary theory|literary]] and [[social theory|soc ...other]], Henriette Barthes, and his aunt and grandmother raised him in the French city of [[Bayonne]] where he received his first exposure to [[culture]], le
    29 KB (4,425 words) - 22:23, 20 May 2019
  • The term '''''deconstruction''''' was coined by [[French]] [[philosopher]] [[Jacques Derrida]] in the 1960s and is used in contempor ...A deconstructive reading is a reading which analyzes the specificity of a text's critical [[difference]] from itself." (Johnson, 1981).
    50 KB (7,273 words) - 21:41, 27 May 2019
  • ...ly 15, 1930 &ndash; October 8, 2004) was an [[Algeria]]n-[[born]] [[France|French]] [[literary critic]] and [[philosopher]] of [[Jew]]ish descent, most often ...on of critics. Retaining the assumption that Derrida sharply [[divides]] [[text]] from referent, or equally “phenomenal” from “absolute Other”, Ži
    15 KB (2,119 words) - 20:38, 25 May 2019
  • ...[[English]] in 2000. It is perhaps the most important "unknown" Marxist [[text]] of the twentieth century.
    8 KB (1,081 words) - 08:29, 24 May 2019
  • ...e poetic. His associative style is intended to slow the reader down. His [[text]] is not there to convince, but to do something to you. He relies heavily o ...ogy]] and structuralism. His early [[work]] coincided with the growth of [[French]] phenomenology and he was influenced by the thought of [[Hegel]] and [[Hei
    68 KB (11,086 words) - 00:02, 26 May 2019
  • ...[patients]] appear to [[enjoy]] their own [[illness]] or [[symptom]]. In [[French]] the [[word]] also has sexual connotations and is associated with sexual p ...alert therefore to the fact that there is something else going on in this text and we might consider it not so much a theory of the essence of photography
    33 KB (5,457 words) - 20:48, 25 May 2019
  • {| align="[[left]]" style="margin-right:10px;line-height:2.0em;text-align:left;align:left;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aaa" | [[French]]: ''[[mathème{{Bottom}}
    13 KB (1,920 words) - 19:17, 20 May 2019
  • ...th when he dreamt of the [[unity]] of German Idealist philosophy and the [[French]] revolutionary masses, to his insistence, in late years, that the leadersh ...ancien [[regime]], anti-social crime AS SUCH (like [[bourgeoisie]] in the French [[revolution]]). After follows the disillusion so sarcastically described b
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...play themselves. The standard disclaimer in a novel ("characters in this [[text]] are a fiction, every resemblance with the real life characters is purely ...d to postpone its publication — they considered inopportune to publish a text on Lenin immediately after the bombing. Does this not points towards the om
    52 KB (8,449 words) - 23:27, 23 May 2019
  • ...r Kojeve the end of history was Russia and America, the realization of the French Revolution. Then he noticed that someting was missing. He found the answer ...me fragments of Hitchcock. How nice it would be to have it included in the text. But concerning film, I am indeed rather conservative. At this moment I am
    29 KB (5,034 words) - 05:05, 22 May 2006
  • ...ou calls a "situation" is any [[particular]] consistent multitude (e.g., [[French]] society, modern art): a situation is structured, and it is its [[structur ...ves its own series of determinations: the Event itself; its denomination ("French Revolution" not being an objective-categorizing designation but part of the
    71 KB (11,371 words) - 21:35, 20 May 2019
  • What followed can be called, borrowing the title of [[Althusser]]'s [[text]] on [[Machiavelli]], la solitude de Lenine: a time when he stood alone, st This gap — which recalls the interval between 1789 and 1793 in the [[French]] Revolution — is the [[space]] of Lenin's unique intervention. The funda
    27 KB (4,181 words) - 22:46, 20 May 2019
  • ...he first edition, the novel begins years later at the Divers' villa on the French Riviera where the couple lives a glamorous life; the story is told from the ...lashback after the first part sticks out: while the jump from the present (French Riviera in 1929) to the past (Zurich in 1919) is convincing, the return to
    214 KB (35,802 words) - 14:38, 12 November 2006
  • ...</i>. (268) This is why, although Islam recognizes the Bible as a sacred [[text]], it has to deny this fact: in Islam, [[Jesus]] did not really die on the ...principle of egalitarian [[citizenship]] – wearing a veil is, from this French republican perspective, also a provocative “monstration.” The second pa
    49 KB (8,295 words) - 17:10, 27 May 2019
  • ...esert, where [[nothing]] is fixed, that the true spirit descended into a [[text]] in order to be universally fulfilled.<br> ...ists: [[le Pen]]'s entire program can be summed up in "[[France]] to the [[French]]!" (and this allows us to generate further formulas: "[[Germany]] to Germa
    31 KB (5,186 words) - 23:15, 23 May 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1959 - 1960
    24 KB (3,720 words) - 16:19, 30 June 2019
  • ...enomenology of Spirit]]''. After [[World War II]], Kojève worked in the [[French]] Ministry of [[Economic]] Affairs as one of the chief planners of the [[Eu ...'s views on this were reprinted in the Spring 1980 (Vol. 9) edition of the French journal ''Commentaire'' in an article entitled 'Capitalisme et socialisme:
    9 KB (1,302 words) - 17:57, 27 May 2019
  • The story was used by the [[French]] [[psychologist]] [[Jacques Lacan]] and the [[philosopher]] [[Jacques Derr * [http://poestories.com/text.php?file=purloined Full text on PoeStories.com] with hyperlinked [[vocabulary]] [[words]].
    6 KB (1,075 words) - 21:00, 23 May 2019
  • ...p; There is sympathy with God:&nbsp; Job correctly reads this very strange text, this divine boasting:&nbsp; "I created monsters, sea serpents, who are you ...fact.&nbsp; Even in revolution it goes like this.&nbsp; If you look at the French Revolution, the shift was purely ideological.&nbsp; They overthrew the king
    27 KB (4,921 words) - 19:37, 14 June 2007
  • ...hroud controversy, and he told me kind of a half-public [[secret]] - the [[French]] have this nice expression, le secret de Polichinelle, a secret which ever ...most popular example used again and again by Susan Sontag in her famous [[text]] on Leni Riefenstahl: mass public spectacles, crowds, gymnastics, thousand
    64 KB (10,850 words) - 00:53, 26 May 2019
  • ...ican and a Jew, embraced them all and told his audience: 'They are no less French than I am - it is the representatives of big multinational capital, ignorin ...ukács was right to make the paradoxical claim that this seminal dissident text perfectly fits the most stringent definition of socialist realism.<br><br>
    22 KB (3,584 words) - 14:56, 12 November 2006
  • ...ou calls a "situation" is any [[particular]] consistent multitude (e.g., [[French]] society, modern art): a situation is structured, and it is its [[structur ...ves its own series of determinations: the Event itself; its denomination ("French Revolution" not being an objective-categorizing designation but part of the
    71 KB (11,385 words) - 21:34, 20 May 2019
  • ...he end of [[history]] was [[Russia]] and America, the realization of the [[French]] [[Revolution]]. Then he noticed that someting was [[missing]]. He found t ...fragments of Hitchcock. How nice it would be to have it included in the [[text]]. But concerning film, I am indeed rather [[conservative]]. At this moment
    30 KB (5,061 words) - 22:00, 20 May 2019
  • nice it would be to have it included in the [[text]]. But concerning film, I am was Russia and America, the realisation of the [[French]] Revolution. Then he
    32 KB (5,235 words) - 20:21, 27 May 2019
  • » Jump to full text Full text [[Text]] [[Word]] Count 8040
    53 KB (8,167 words) - 18:19, 27 May 2019
  • ...many and varied references to [[popular culture]] he makes throughout the text. However, as Zizek admits, this book should probably be subtitled "Everythi ..., [[phallus]] and [[father]]. Hollywood is once again the [[lure]] in this text as Zizek elaborates each concept with reference to popular culture. However
    13 KB (2,068 words) - 03:38, 21 May 2019
  • The latest book by the Slovenian critic Slavoj Zizek takes the work of French philosopher Gilles Deleuze as the beginning of a dazzling inquiry into the {| style="width:100%; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"
    2 KB (346 words) - 21:24, 14 June 2007
  • ...which he says is a "rebuke" to "the high-minded [[terrorism]] of so much [[French]] theory." But the [[real]] [[significance]] of the Zizek Effect is the way ...honed from at least fifteen years of work already published in Slovene or French. Indeed Zizek possesses true philosophical precocity, having published his
    45 KB (7,481 words) - 23:15, 23 May 2019
  • maxims and mathemes, those Zen koans of the French postmodern era: acts did happen--the [[French]] [[Revolution]], the October Revolution, maybe the
    63 KB (10,146 words) - 21:35, 20 May 2019
  • ...ere a politically-charged superstructure. This machine, reiterated text-by-text, seems to work for Zizek as a way of reading Hegel, and the Lacan-machine-f </b>Zizek does not pretend to provide an empirically correct reading of any text, and his warnings about the deadlock of representation that sabotages any p
    95 KB (15,989 words) - 07:54, 12 September 2015
  • ...front, so that it is first laid out for us to inspect; in the traditional French lavatory, it is in the back, so that the shit is meant to disappear as soon ...19th century German philosophy to the notoriously obscure writings of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan... Indeed, Lacan once cruelly quipped of James
    87 KB (14,944 words) - 13:51, 12 September 2015
  • ...[[United States]]' invasion of Iraq, Zizek, while rejecting the combined [[French]] and [[German]] opposition as a kind of appeasement "reminiscent of the [[ ...[statement]] significantly left out of the "[[official]]" version of the [[text]] published in <i>[[New Left]] Review</i>) suggests as a "solution" to the
    32 KB (5,154 words) - 20:52, 23 May 2019
  • ...ce]] – [[May 20]], [[2005]], [[Chatenay Malabry]]) was a [[French people|French]] [[philosopher]] best known for combining [[phenomenology|phenomenologica ...|WWII]] interrupted Ricœur's career, and he was drafted to serve in the [[French]] [[army]] in 1939. His unit was [[captured]] during the [[German]] invasio
    9 KB (1,276 words) - 20:51, 20 May 2019
  • ==Full Text== ...<a href="#fn9" name="cfn9"><sup>9</sup></a> Recall the old reproach of the French Communist philosophers to Sartre's existentialism: Sartre threw away the en
    82 KB (13,178 words) - 17:18, 27 May 2019
  • [[Full]] [[Text]] (7518 [[words]]) ...he most popular example used again and again by Susan Sontag in her famous text on Leni Riefenstahl: mass public spectacles, crowds, gymnastics, thousands
    46 KB (7,621 words) - 00:50, 21 May 2019
  • ...ons du Seuil]], [[{{Y}}|1966]].</ref> [[Écrits]] is not an introductory [[text]] but the summation of a lifetime's [[training|teaching]] and [[clinic]]al ...tic]] of [[Desire]]', but it still only consists of one-[[third]] of the [[French]] edition. A new translation of this selection has recently been produced b
    3 KB (409 words) - 03:46, 21 May 2019
  • Writing is distingiushed by a prevalence of the text in the sense that this factor of discourse will assume in this essay a fact ...s each time with something new, I have refrained so far from giving such a text, with one exception, which is not particularly outstanding in the context o
    31 KB (5,445 words) - 15:21, 20 November 2008
  • {| class="toc" style="line-height:2.0em;width:100%;text-align:justify;border-spacing:8px;margin-bottom:10px" id="toc" align="center ...247 ff., and to Vorländer's edition (published by Meiner) for the German text, here p. 86.</ref> His very words, as much as they are suggestive.
    59 KB (10,417 words) - 14:56, 30 July 2019
  • ...as <i>unterlegt, untertragen, </i>which, with the superb ambiguity of the French language, appear to be translated by the same word-<i>soufrance.1 </i> <font size="-1"><sup> I</sup> In French, the phrase <i>'en soufrance' </i>means 'in suspense', 'in abeyance', ,awai
    29 KB (5,119 words) - 02:53, 21 May 2019
  • ...which is precisely there under life. That is also where Freud's lengthy [[text]] leads us, where he tells us - <i>Don't believe that life is an exalting g </p><dl><dd><font size="-1"><sup>8</sup> The [[French]] version of the Greek that [[Lacan]] uæs is, literally translated: 'It wo
    19 KB (3,512 words) - 21:56, 27 May 2019
  • ...eth on edge. But that doesn't happen. It's a funny [[thing]], but once a [[text]] has been in print for a certain period of time, it allows the transitory ...e borne in [[mind]] throughout the following discussion that "le mal" in [[French]] includes the [[ideas]] both of "[[evil]]" and of "[[suffering]]."</font>P
    40 KB (7,339 words) - 01:20, 26 May 2019
  • a whole generation of French thinkers. For insofar as language the succession of sounds <i>s-ö-r</i> which serves as its signifier in French;<br>
    32 KB (5,721 words) - 23:20, 17 May 2006
  • ...e point to which Maurice Merleau-Ponty leads us. But, if you refer to his text, you will see that it is at this point that he chooses to withdraw, in orde ...cotoma. The term was introduced into the psychoanalytic vocabulary by the French School. Is it simply a metaphor? We find here once again the ambiguity tha
    27 KB (4,833 words) - 00:32, 21 May 2019
  • ...3, 1901]] – [[Jacques Lacan:Chronology#1981|September 9, 1981]]) was a [[French]] [[psychiatrist]] and [[psychoanalyst]]. {| style="line-height:1.5em;valign:top;width:50%;text-align:left;"
    5 KB (600 words) - 01:24, 25 May 2019
  • ...e [[German]] [[schools]] on the psychologies of various peoples, and the [[French]] schools of [[sociology]]. [[Freud]] later made use of this [[work]] to de The term <i>taboo</i> appears in a short [[text]] of Freud's entitled "The [[Significance]] of Sequences of Vowels" (1911d)
    18 KB (2,676 words) - 00:21, 21 May 2019
  • [[French]], that sounds false and awkward. That God affirms himself as identical would have liked to go through the [[text]] with ou-denounced and designated
    43 KB (7,717 words) - 00:58, 25 May 2019
  • [[French]] [[philosopher]], novelist, and playwright Jean [[Paul]] Sartre (1905-1980 ...eloped his ideas further in <i>Being and Nothingness</i> (1943). In this [[text]] he suggested that Sigmund [[Freud]]'s work (which he characterizes as "em
    11 KB (1,617 words) - 21:09, 25 May 2019
  • ...he term defined by Ian Buchanan: "Dark precursors are those moments in a [[text]] which must be read in reverse if we are not to mistake effects for causes Dupuy provides the example of the [[French]] presidential elections in May 1995; here is the January forecast of the m
    60 KB (9,765 words) - 23:51, 20 May 2019
  • {| align="[[right]]" style="line-height:2.0em;text-align:justify;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aaa" | [[French]]: ''[[belle âme]]''
    2 KB (305 words) - 02:40, 24 May 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1970 - 1971
    3 KB (355 words) - 16:38, 30 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1971 - 1972
    6 KB (794 words) - 01:44, 2 July 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1973 - 1974
    5 KB (628 words) - 18:46, 24 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:center; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1975 - 1976
    4 KB (478 words) - 18:52, 24 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:center; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1977 - 1978
    4 KB (542 words) - 18:59, 24 June 2019
  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1978 - 1979
    4 KB (522 words) - 19:12, 24 June 2019
  • ...an himself when he affirms that "there is no training ([[formation]], in [[French]]) of the analyst, there are [[formations]] of the [[unconscious]]." Howeve ...striking to read such a proposition by Lacan in the first version of his [[text]] in which he defines for the first [[time]] the two titles guaranteed by t
    21 KB (3,645 words) - 08:52, 24 May 2019
  • [[Full]] [[Text]] (11075 [[words]]) ...s from reaching their self-identity?9 [[Recall]] the old reproach of the [[French]] [[Communist]] [[philosophers]] to [[Sartre]]'s [[existentialism]]: Sartre
    67 KB (10,603 words) - 17:16, 27 May 2019
  • ..., pp. 829-850), delivered one month later at Bonneval, as well as from the text of the [[seminars]] (still unpublished) on which both papers are based. Wit ...all not delay over [[them]]. Rather, let us disregard the [[order]] of the text and cull a few propositions that seem to us to articulate the [[essence]] o
    45 KB (7,359 words) - 16:48, 24 December 2020
  • ...results of that effort. As in the previous essay, so here, the available [[text]] cries for glosses that only the seminar can give. But such is Lacan's man ...epression), the result is a palimpsest which, on the evidence given in the text, is all but inscrutable. After [[touching]] briefly on certain characterist
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  • ...communitarian feeling. I think it's the same in France, which is why the [[French]] Communist Party is very anti-European. And this is the [[paradox]] of the ...Unconscious," 1960, Lacan says as much. It's the crucial formula of the [[text]], and it's a radical reversal of what he was saying a few months before. H
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  • [[René Descartes]] (1596-1650), the [[French]] [[philosopher]], mathematician and soldier who is often referred to as th It argues that reality is a [[linguistic]] [[text]], and that, as language is also unstable and subject to a constant [[slipp
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  • The original [[French]] titles are listed below the [[English]] ones. <blockquote style="background: white; border: 0px solid black; padding: 1em; text-align:center; line-height:2.0em;">
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  • ...of high excitement, and still shaken by the events of May [[1968]], the [[French]] intelligentsia greeted this work by a renowned [[philosopher]] and an ant Indeed, <i>Anti-Oedipus</i> today appears as an anti-dramatic [[text]], to be read as a [[comedy]] deriding capitalism and glorifying a schizoph
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  • Sigmund [[Freud]] first published this article in [[French]] in the <i>[[Revue neurologique]]</i> in [[Paris]]. It is important for tw ...[notion]] of <i>[[repression]]</i>, which is [[missing]] from the French [[text]]. Freud also adds the analysis of a "case of chronic [[paranoia]]" that sh
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  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1956 - 1957
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  • ...of phenomena. They belong to the order of language ("[[langagier]]" in [[French]]). ...he meaning of what the patient says, just like we grasp the meaning of a [[text]].
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  • a [[whole]] generation of [[French]] thinkers. For insofar as language the succession of sounds <i>s-ö-r</i> which serves as its signifier in French;<br>
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  • ...eth on edge. But that doesn't happen. It's a funny [[thing]], but once a [[text]] has been in print for a certain period of time, it allows the transitory ...e borne in [[mind]] throughout the following discussion that "le mal" in [[French]] includes the [[ideas]] both of "[[evil]]" and of "[[suffering]]."</font>P
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  • ...which is precisely there under life. That is also where Freud's lengthy [[text]] leads us, where he tells us - <i>Don't believe that life is an exalting g </p><dl><dd><font size="-1"><sup>8</sup> The [[French]] version of the Greek that [[Lacan]] uæs is, literally translated: 'It wo
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  • Writing is distingiushed by a prevalence of the [[text]] in the sense that<br> [[thing]] new, I have refirained so far from giving such a text, with one exception, which is not particularly outstanding in the context o
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  • ...e point to which Maurice Merleau-Ponty leads us. But, if you refer to his text, you will see that it is at this point that he chooses to withdraw, in orde ...cotoma. The term was introduced into the psychoanalytic vocabulary by the French School. Is it simply a metaphor? We find here once again the ambiguity tha
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  • ...as <i>unterlegt, untertragen, </i>which, with the superb ambiguity of the French language, appear to be translated by the same word-<i>soufrance.1 </i> <font size="-1"><sup> I</sup> In French, the phrase <i>'en soufrance' </i>means 'in suspense', 'in abeyance', ,awai
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  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px; text-align:center;" width="240px"|
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  • {| align="[[right]]" style="line-height:2.0em;text-align:right;margin-left: 10px;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aa | [[French]]: [[quilting point|point de capiton{{Bottom}}
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  • ...mportailt psychoanalytic languages in use today is that developed by the [[French]] psychoanalyst, [[Jacques lacan|Jacques Lacan]] (1901-1981). This dictiona ...has yet been written; there are, in fact, a [[number]] of dictionaries in French that deal extensively with Lacanian terms (Chemama, 1993; Kauftman, 1994),
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  • See article in original [[language]] - Pacte de Paris - [[French]] When Jacques [[Lacan]] founded his School, the French School of Psychoanalysis, 24 June 1964, he launched an appeal to "reconquer
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  • {| align="center" style="width:600px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:100px;text-align:center; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1979 - 1980
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  • Structuralism was first and foremost a method of analysis that dominated [[French]] [[intellectual]] [[life]] in the 1950s and 1960s. It was not a movement a ...hnique]] of Psychoanalysis and concerned Freud's late metapsychological [[text]] Beyond the [[Pleasure]] [[Principle]] (1984b [1920]). Lacan was primarily
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  • {| align="center" style="width:700px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" | style="width:150px;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"| 1969 - 1970
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  • ...s by French students and [[workers]]. In the 1970s and 1980s a new wave of French theorists and critics trained or influenced by Lacan began to extend or rev These post-Lacanians included contributors in the late 1960s and 1970s to the French journal Tel Quel,feminists influenced by [[deconstruction]], and Continenta
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  • ...largely auteurist to a politically charged journal. The [[other]] major [[French]] film journal at the time, Cinéthique, formed in 1969, took a more radica ...sed by Mulvey and others through her appropriation of Gilles Deleuze’s [[text]] Présentation de Sacher-Masoch, le froid et le cruel (1967, [[Masochism]]
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  • ...by linguistic [[philosophy]]) of [[speech]] [[acts]], speech genres, and [[text]] structure; sociolinguistics, [[analyses]] of the [[social]] dimensions of ...guistic [[theory]] suggests a welcome alternative to an impressionistic or text-focused critical practice; for [[another]] critic, linguistics as a [[scien
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  • ...rough the 1960s, upon a noncomparative analysis of the discrete literary [[text]], an approach shorn from loose historical and biographical considerations, ...[France]] were much stronger, less attenuated. As Clifford demonstrates, [[French]] ethnographic experimentation in the 1920s, especially as manifested in th
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  • ...earch, and the German analyst Therese Benedek, the [[author]] of a major [[text]] on psychoanalytic supervision and one of a [[number]] of prominent [[fema
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  • ...of [[authority]], the presupposed mysterious [[meaning]] of the written [[text]] was the [[object]] of belief ''par excellence''. The aim of Plato's criti ...should reject, say, Jacobins, who imposed onto the [[plurality]] of the [[French]] [[society]] their universal notions of equality and [[other]] truths, and
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  • {| style="width:350px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" This [[theoretical]] report was read at the Eleventh Congress of [[French]]-[[Speaking]] [[Psychoanalysts]] in Brussels, May 1948.
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  • ...in it a repetition automatism in the sense that interests us in Freud's [[text]].<br><br> ...its law, thatis, precisely, the greatest number. That Dupin accuses the [[French]] of [[deception]] for applying the word analysis to [[algebra]] will hardl
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  • ...on [[Joyce]]'s ''[[Ulysses]]'' by Valéry Larbaud with readings from the [[text]], an [[event]] organized by La maison des amis des livres, and at which [[ ...alytique de Paris]] ([[SPP]]), the first [[school|association]] of [[{{G}}|French]] [[psychoanalyst]]s.
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  • e. The [[French]] is leftre ell sOllffrallce. which means a leiter held up in the course of ...version in 1966, which he put at the beginning of [[Ecrits]] (63). In this text, he was [[looking]] for a [[logic]] of [[intersubjectivity]]. For that [[pu
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  • ...e et Jean Bergès. Publishes the review ''La Revue lacanienne'' (site in [[French]]) [http://www.lacanchine.com Lacan Chine] -- French-[[language]] site run by Parisian [[psychoanalyst]] Guy Flecher, dedicated
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  • <div style="text-align:center;border-bottom:1px solid #aaa"> ...[patients]] appear to [[enjoy]] their own [[illness]] or [[symptom]]. In [[French]] the [[word]] also has sexual connotations and is associated with sexual p
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  • ..."2" align="center" bgcolor="ffffff" style="background:#ffffff; width:100%; text-align:center; line-height:2.0em;" | colspan="3" style="text-align:justify" |
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  • ...room with a plan of the [[structure]] of [[Spinoza]]'s ''[[Ethics]]'', a [[text]] which would always remain dear to him and which he would quote at the sta ...n]] would say that this concept was the closest that contemporary [[France|French]] [[psychiatry]] got to a [[structural analysis]], with its emphasis on the
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  • ...orism]] and appalled by the [[language]] of its proponents. Yet today, the French Revolution is celebrated as the [[event]] which gave [[birth]] to a [[natio {| style="width:100%; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"
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  • {| width="100%" style="width:550px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;" {| style="line-height:2.0em;width:100%;text-align:justify;border-spacing:8px;margin:6px -8px"
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  • ...shed in 1974 under the [[name]] [[Télévision]]. This programme and the [[text]] which stemmed from it became famous because this is the only [[real]] tel
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  • ...french]] [[public]] TV) broadcast this program. This documentary and its [[text]] became famous because this is the only televisual [[experience]] practice ...ft]]" bgcolor="ffffff" style="background:#ffffff;width:100%; height:200px; text-align:center; line-height:2.0em;"
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  • {| style="line-height:2.0em;width:100%;text-align:justify;border-spacing:8px;margin-bottom:10px" id="toc" align=center ...olution [http://onebigtorrent.org/torrents/6384/Terror-Robespierre-and-the-French-Revolution OneBigTorrent]
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  • ...imate seal of authority, the presupposed mysterious meaning of the written text was the object of belief par excellence. The aim of Plato's critique of wri ...hy one should reject, say, Jacobins, who imposed onto the plurality of the French society their universal notions of equality and other truths, and thus nece
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  • The publicity text for the new recording of Shostakovich's First Violin Concerto by Leila Jose ...ne superego: at the level of the public symbolic Law, nothing happens, the text is clean, while, at another level, it bombards the spectator with the super
    19 KB (3,244 words) - 17:00, 12 January 2008
  • ...ists: [[le Pen]]'s entire program can be summed up in "[[France]] to the [[French]]!" (and this allows us to generate further formulas: "[[Germany]] to Germa ...wn split [[nature]], the gap that separates the [[explicit]] ideological [[text]] from its [[obscene]] undertext. In his reaction to the photos showing Ira
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  • ...ry believer’s direct contact with Word of God as it was delivered in the Text; the mediator (the Particular) thus disappears, withdraws into insignifican ...out of its socket and throwing it around. Martin, the legendary idiot from French fairy tales, did exactly this when his mother, worried that he will never f
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  • [[Category:French Text]] [[Category:French]] [[Category:Lacan:Text]]
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  • |French/English ...Yale University, Kanzer Seminar »  p7-31 of Scilicet, then on p32 is the text, ‘Conversation with students’, p32-37 of Scilicet 6/7.
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  • Published in 1973, “L’Etourdit” was one of the [[French]] [[philosopher]] Jacques Lacan’s most important works. The book posed qu ...Alain]] [[Badiou]] and Barbara Cassin take possession of Lacan’s short [[text]], [[thinking]] “with” [[Lacan]] about his propositions and what kinds
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  • ..."2" align="center" bgcolor="ffffff" style="background:#ffffff; width:100%; text-align:center; line-height:2.0em;" ! style="background:#ffffff;text-align:center;line-height:2.0em;" | Year
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  • ..."2" align="center" bgcolor="ffffff" style="background:#ffffff; width:100%; text-align:center; line-height:1.0em;" <span class="c0">[[French]]</span>
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  • ...[[post-structuralism]], critical [[theory]], linguistics, 20th-century French philosophy, [[film]] theory, and [[clinical]] psychoanalysis. </div> {| cellpadding="2px" cellspacing="5px" style="text-align:justify;vertical-align:top;background-color:#ffffff"
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  • [[Sigmund Freud]]’s [[French]] contemporaries initially neglected the [[significance]] of [[psychoanalys ...s the annual “Congress of French [[speaking]] Psychoanalysts” in which French speaking I.P.A. analysts from the [[world]] over participate.
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  • ...s, and, above all, in Alfred Hitchcock's films. The playfulness of Zizek's text, however, is entirely different from that associated with the deconstructiv
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  • ...old and fun; as is also his discussion of the semiotic differences between French, American and German toilets (perhaps a new explanation for the real [i.e.
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  • ...-header-menu"><div class="menu-menu-container">* [../../../text/index.html Text] ...v></div></div><div class="menu-menu-container">* [../../../text/index.html Text]
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  • ..., above all, in Alfred Hitchcock’s films. The playfulness of Žižek’s text, however, is entirely different from that associated with the deconstructiv
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  • <div style="text-align: center"> |align="center" width="100%"| [https://acheronta.org/index.htm [[File:Text/Text/./Acheronta%2012%20-%20Encore%20-%20Se%CC%81minaire%20de%20Jacques%20Lacan%
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  • ...tself only thanks to a failure of what it means, for what he means, as the French says it well, his meaning is his actual enjoyment,</font></div><div class="
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  • ...</font>''ex-sistence</font>'' of saying. This is what I pointed out in the text says </font>''L'Étourdit </font>'' - d, i, t. -, that's what I stressed t ...ellence, which of a rupture of being leaves trace. That's what I said in a text, certainly not without imperfections, that I called </font>''Lituraterre</f
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  • In ''Can Politics Be Thought?''—published in French in 1985 and appearing here in English for the first time—Alain Badiou off “This elegant and indispensable translation of a crucial text from Alain Badiou’s 1980s political writing redirects the entire English-
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  • ...bilingual edition presents ''L’Incident d’Antioche'' in its original French and, on facing pages, an expertly executed English translation. Badiou adds ...es. In the e-book, links at the beginning of each Act and Scene connect to French and English versions.''
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  • Published in 1973, “L’Etourdit” was one of the French philosopher Jacques Lacan’s most important works. The book posed question ...ship'', Alain Badiou and Barbara Cassin take possession of Lacan’s short text, thinking “with” Lacan about his propositions and what kinds of questio
    2 KB (283 words) - 02:44, 15 July 2019
  • ...inally signed “Andrei Platonov, translator from the [[French]],” the [[text]] purported to be a promotional pamphlet translated into Russian by Platono
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  • ...al theorist Fredric Jameson offers a new reading of Hegel’s foundational text ''Phenomenology of Spirit''. ...n purely philosophical named concepts. The ending, on the aftermath of the French Revolution, is interpreted by Jameson, contra Fukuyama’s “end of histor
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  • ...estern metaphysics, and has been a central text in initiating the shift in French thought – away from Hegel and Marx, towards Nietzsche and Freud.
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  • * [http://theoryleaks.org/text/ Text] ...offers readers a uniquely detailed engagement with the ideas of legendary French psychoanalyst Jacques Laca''n. The Freudian Thing'' is one of Lacan’s mo
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  • ...training programme of the Société Française de Psychanalyse. The French text was prepared by Jacques-Alain Miller in consultation with Jacques Lacan, fr This Seminar, together with [http://theory.local/text/books/jacques-lacan/the-seminar-of-jacques-lacan-freuds-papers-on-technique
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  • The French text was prepared by Jacques-Alain Miller in consultation with Jacques Lacan, fr
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  • After obtaining a diploma in Philosophy and French from the University of Ljubljana in 1978, Dolar continued his studies at th ...as our own desires to die and to go to the opera.” [http://theory.local/text/books/mladen-dolar/a-voice-and-nothing-more/ ''A Voice and Nothing More''],
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  • ...TF, the french public TV) broadcast this program. This documentary and its text became famous because this is the only televisual experience practiced by L '''See also: '''[http://theory.local/text/books/jacques-lacan/television-a-challenge-to-the-psychoanalytic-establishm
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  • ...ical. '''How did the century re-organise the three great signifiers of the French Revolution: liberty, equality, fraternity? The dominant thesis today, under ...ing those moments when invention is lacking – those moments when, as the French revolutionary Saint-Just once said, 'the revolution is frozen'. The univers
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  • ...ians, Dame Murazaki Shikubu composed ''The Story of Gengi'', the greatest text in which what is sayable about love in its masculine dimension is deployed. ...ctural" or illusory conception of love, dear to a pessimistic tradition of French moralists. I understand by this the conception that love is merely an ornam
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  • ...ack into their European ori­ginal ("Aha, To-tsi is Trot­sky!") makes the text much more pleas­ur­able – just ima­gine how much ''Me-Ti'' would hav ...f sub­ject and the fore­clos­ure of truth as cause. A sci­en­ti­fic text is enounced from a de-sub­ject­iv­ized "empty" loc­a­tion, it allows
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  • .../ but it failed." [3] The obvious link is that the first line of the first text ("Suddenly, no, at last, long last, I couldn't any more") echoes the famous ...upplemented with a minimal figure of the big Other. – Here, then, is the text of this piece in its entirety:
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  • ...construction and textual analysis, for which "there is nothing outside the text," so that we are caught in an endless process of interpretation. Foucault, ...es; the assignation of the originary as [what is] said and not-said in the text, so that we do not have to locate discursive practices in the field of tran
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  • ...s edition of ''Le Monde'', the most prestigious (and proverbially haughty) French daily newspaper, appears in the early afternoon of the previous day (for ex ...r Realphilosophie'', Hamburg: Felix Meiner 1969, p. 199. Incidentally, the text goes on: "Through cunning, the willing becomes ''feminine ''…"―the "fem
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  • ...scern signs which indicate that progress is possible. Kant interpreted the French Revolution as such a sign which pointed toward the possibility of freedom: ...involves a logical paradox deployed by Jean-Pierre Dupuy in his admirable text on Hitchcock's ''Vertigo'':
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  • ...y's neoracists: le Pen's entire program can be summed up in "France to the French!" (and this allows us to generate further formulas: "Germany to Germans!", ...e is its own split nature, the gap that separates the explicit ideological text from its obscene undertext. In his reaction to the photos showing Iraqi pri
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  • ...to discern here, the contours of Kant's criticism of the perversion of the French Revolution in the revolutionary terror of the Jacobins.) And how can we avo ...led, with no symbolic debt haunting his memory. Wagner himself changed the text concerning this crucial point: in the first version of Erda's warning in th
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  • {| class="toc" style="line-height:1.3em;width:100%;text-align:justify;border-spacing:8px;margin-bottom:10px" id="toc" align="center <ref>RGK: Etienne‐Jules Marey (1830‐1904) was a French scientist, physiologist and chronophotographer. His work was significant in
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