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Journal Article
boundary 2 (2014) 41 (1): 101–112.
Published: 01 February 2014
... thinking in Eastern Europe during the first decade of transition. © 2014 by Duke University Press 2014 Spaces of Desire: Consumer Bound and Unbound
Ivaylo Ditchev
I can remember how, back in 1999, a friend, who had enjoyed...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (2): 57–84.
Published: 01 May 2015
... they, too, are becoming increasingly bound to precariousness under neoliberalism. These new models will have a stronger sense of cultural and aesthetic autonomy than the older leftist models that have dominated the humanities since the 1960s. The essay makes this argument in three stages: first by offering...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2017) 44 (4): 57–75.
Published: 01 November 2017
...Gil Anidjar When he refers to civil war as “self-laceration,” Carl Schmitt evokes a strange figure, whereby the state could be bound for self-destruction. In this essay, I am less interested in civil war than in the conception of a state as suicidal. What could that even mean? What could be gained...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2016) 43 (1): 107–141.
Published: 01 February 2016
... that is not bound to the creation of a new field but rather to rethinking the ontologies of the acoustic. © 2016 by Duke University Press 2016 ecomusicology multinaturalism sound Eduardo Viveiros de Castro Tânia Stolze Lima Acoustic Multinaturalism, the Value of Nature,
and the Nature of Music...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2017) 44 (1): 213–237.
Published: 01 February 2017
... that are as incapacitating as they are enabling. This leaves the problem of the decision regarding the future as at once ungrounded while also bounded by the archive of the human species. © 2017 by Duke University Press 2017 pharmakon technè deconstruction cinema tertiary retention References Bennett...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2021) 48 (1): 237–250.
Published: 01 February 2021
... of (slow) reading bound to the spirit of experiment and linguistic play. Versed in the conventions and operations of literature in order to do it justice, philology nevertheless speaks in another voice, one more ascetic and conjectural. Having broken with the positivism of the Alexandrian tradition...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (4): 32–37.
Published: 01 November 2015
..., a sYntax
youI’m—traditional don’tclose enoughhave to todrive walk. me crazy,
bound as one to the site must be to be the site’s is a deed to bind one to
a to thus into To and not One. the deed cites sites to One’s, thus the site
(Site) is One’s (One’s) by deed and thus...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (2): 85–104.
Published: 01 May 2015
...
through reflection and constitutes for Plato proper knowledge, unlike the
second form of memory that, because it is inscribed in and bound to its
technical prosthetics, leads to forgetting. In other words, anamnesia is an
intensification of memory, whereas hypomnesia is a contamination of mem-
ory...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (3): 229–234.
Published: 01 August 2009
... that can be separated from a category that is, by
definition, so thoroughly bound up with the concept of voice. Much has been
said about the lyric impulse as a cry of pain, something ineffable, unpre-
sentable, maybe even unrepresentable. But the social qualities of the lyric
are effaced when...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (3): 77–95.
Published: 01 August 2009
... (or in some cases merely a pseudo-intellectualism) at
a time when most poetry of whatever stripe, bound to ethoi of either emo-
tional authenticity or bald sentiment, was proudly antitheoretical and anti-
intellectual. But, and here is the catch, unlike the theoretically informed and
intellectually...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2020) 47 (1): 97–114.
Published: 01 February 2020
... at the Singer s Warsaw Festival as well as in the Auschwitz Jew- ish Center, studied with Ba ka at the Institute of Fine Arts in Pozna , and his influence is clearly detectable in the works of this younger generation. At the same time, the interrogation of Polish history and memory is bound...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2013) 40 (3): 39–57.
Published: 01 August 2013
... as “an institutional process of interaction
between man and his environment . . . that involves the use of material
means to satisfy ends” (EI, 248). What Polanyi calls formal economy is
associated with modern economic theory and governs human action within
the bounds of the institution of the market, while...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2001) 28 (2): 21–32.
Published: 01 May 2001
... as memorable as Thelonius Monk’s wordless and continually ex-
tended residency or July 1961’s intricately spontaneous Eric Dolphy/Booker
Little performancesthat still amaze even those who long ago memorized
every note’’ (199).
While neither exclusive nor biological, Afrocentric modernism is
bound...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2007) 34 (3): 23–31.
Published: 01 August 2007
... theoretical sys-
tem of bioforms was bound to leave fields like botany rather in the mode
of an organic chemistry lacking a larger electrodynamic theory to account
for the seemingly infinite numbers of combinable subsets called carbon
compounds. The authoritative observer, working...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2014) 41 (3): 27–54.
Published: 01 August 2014
... as a useful mathematical limit or portal to the abyss.) The
hero of the primer is Georg Cantor, the mathematician who “tamed” infinity
and conducted it as a bound quantity into the human institution of mathe-
matics. Natalini has several excellent suggestions for how the mathemat-
ics of infinity can...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (1): 201–213.
Published: 01 February 2010
....
Lerner / Ashbery’s Lyric Mediacy 205
. . . likewise none are true,
Only is the bounding from air to air, a serpentine
Gesture which hides the truth behind a congruent
Message, the way air hides the sky, is, in fact,
Tearing it limb from limb this very moment...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2020) 47 (2): 19–27.
Published: 01 May 2020
..., the inherited system(s) of fixed forms was not and never had been eternal. By extension, the word tragedy could not correspond to a formal norm or eternal value, only to a set of cul- tural and historical assumptions bound up in time and place. However, the question then arises as to by whom and on what...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (2): 231–245.
Published: 01 May 2015
... / Poststructuralist Ontology 241
agents seeking through politics autonomous spaces are doing the work of
democratic dissensus. If he did not make this concession, Critchley would
have to defend a heteronomy that would be bound to the play of ambition
and power, or least force, and not just to “a responsive...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2006) 33 (2): 177–201.
Published: 01 May 2006
... values has
1. Bruce Robbins, ‘‘Disjoining the Left: Cultural Contradictions of Anticapitalism bound-
ary 2 26, no. 3 (Fall 1999): 30.
boundary 2 33:2 (2006) DOI 10.1215/01903659-2006-008 © 2006 by Duke University Press
178 boundary 2 / Summer 2006
appealed to a middle-American constituency...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2017) 44 (3): 59–72.
Published: 01 August 2017
... of what is deemed society’s refuse—
what I call fecal motives—draws distinctions between the free and the
bound, the familiar and the strange, the privileged and the stigmatized. This
ongoing cultivation of human waste materials asks us to recast interpreta-
tion itself. How can we shed the mantle...
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