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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2005) 1 (2): 215–232.
Published: 01 July 2005
... is the most colossal confidence trick. There is a race and a winner and the winner gets a prize. But there are no rules – and the audience know there are no rules. The illusion, intrinsic to the process, that there are sophisticated judging procedures from which the year's best novel emerges, can only...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2017) 13 (2): 250–258.
Published: 01 July 2017
...Jordan Crandall If it please the court, I shall support the claim through the demonstration of additional features. The judge granted the request. The presentation screen lowered from the ceiling, the lights dimmed, and the seats reclined. Demonstration commenced of features currently...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2018) 14 (1): 78–89.
Published: 01 March 2018
... if, by means of a superfluous effort, they transgressively overstep the way of life held to be right. Thus luxury is an excessive effort that is not judged to be simply an excessive expense in worldly terms, as it would be in the case of a checked shirt or a floral carpet. But the excessive effort...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2019) 15 (2): 139–161.
Published: 01 July 2019
... : Henry Holt . Hoefnagels Gerardus Petrus . 1969 . The Other Side of Crime: An Inversion of the Concept of Crime . New York : Springer . Hofer Paul J. Blackwell Kevin R. Ruback R. Barry . 1999 . “ The Effect of Federal Sentencing Guidelines on Judge Sentencing Disparity...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2017) 13 (2): 150–155.
Published: 01 July 2017
... and gore, where the conscious life of the victim, his or her power to think and judge and decide is mired in the opaque throbbing of pain ( Scarry 1985 ). Psychological torture is produced by physical means—arrest, solitary confinement, food deprivation, sleep deprivation, and stress positions. Forcing...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2013) 9 (2): 117–143.
Published: 01 July 2013
... of the word “aesthetic” in Kant, since there are two regimes of judging (of Urteilskraft ). Judgment is passed either on the case that corresponds to the rule or on the rule that governs the case. In the Anthropology , Kant terms the first procedure “judgment”: “the faculty of discovering ( auszufinden...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2009) 5 (2): 149–178.
Published: 01 July 2009
..., there is a moment of suspense, one mirrored for Derrida in the judge's suspenseful moment before the madness of the decision. In that moment, the law itself is suspended; it waivers as the judge must – in order for the decision to be deemed just and responsible – destroying or suspending the law before rejecting...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2017) 13 (3): 288–292.
Published: 01 November 2017
... constructed in which there was to be racial uniformity and social harmony. This was not a programmed return to a medieval or earlier paradise but a modern state of balanced industry and agriculture, town and country. The elimination of the Jews and other minorities, judged parasitic or pathological...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2006) 2 (2): 193–212.
Published: 01 July 2006
... decision making that demonstrates national self-determination. Such changes are, in themselves, meaningful to the actors directly involved: civil servants, politicians, lawyers, and judges. However, the meaning of such changes for people not involved in the immediate practices of that institutional reform...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2009) 5 (3): 326–333.
Published: 01 November 2009
... government charged that we broke the law by bringing aid and medicine to Iraq before and during the second gulf war. An unjust law must be broken to serve a higher law called justice, Bill argued before the judge. I found it moving and convincing; unfortunately the judge did not. We lost the case. Bill...
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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2013) 9 (1): 53–69.
Published: 01 March 2013
... got 150 rubles from a job, but actually it was 37. Brodsky: That's the advance! That's just the advance! It's only part of what I'll get later. Judge: Tell the court why in between jobs you didn't work and led a parasitic life style? Brodsky: I worked in between jobs. I did what I do...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2005) 1 (3): 257–278.
Published: 01 November 2005
.... The Tribunals of Inquiry are identified by the names of the senior members of the judiciary who have presided over them. The most significant from the point of view of our interest in this paper are: the McCracken Tribunal (Judge Brian McCracken); the Moriarty Tribunal (Judge Michael Moriarty); the Mahon...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2014) 10 (3): 300–319.
Published: 01 November 2014
... becomes articulate as a mode of inconsiderate thoughtlessness that tacitly assumes a position superior to that of the object, in finally judging it without allowing it to speak. This “violent” ( gewaltsam ) incautiousness suppresses the Other— ein Drittes (a Third), as Adorno (1958 : 154) terms...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2016) 12 (2): 155–172.
Published: 01 July 2016
..., communicated, and judged, making reflective judgment and the attainment of publicness possible ( Arendt 1982 : 79–85). This understanding is essential for us to link our personal subjective to a common ground where individuals’ perceptions can be articulated and communicated. But a most unexpected...
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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2014) 10 (3): 354–375.
Published: 01 November 2014
... by a traditional utilitarian framework in which investments in human capital should be analyzed and judged in terms of the returns they produce or the income that can be expected. However, the current neoliberal world of global finance capital proposes a rather different model, one in which corporations...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2018) 14 (3): 413–415.
Published: 01 November 2018
... familiarity that they just instinctively ‘feel right’ and are used to judge others and ourselves” (9) and a conclusion that considers the relevance of the study in the context of Brexit and Trump, asking pertinent questions about whether the public mood of nostalgia, exclusion, and fear can be shifted toward...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2018) 14 (1): 95–108.
Published: 01 March 2018
... does and does not have taste. Kant describes this situation as follows: someone makes an aesthetic judgment and makes it public, “then he expects the very same satisfaction of others: he judges not merely for himself, but for everyone, and speaks of beauty as if it were a property of things. . . . He...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2020) 16 (3): 322–339.
Published: 01 November 2020
..., and producing Iranian carpets. Growing up, I spent my childhood immersed in this magnificent world, which was really characterized by criticizing and judging the relative merits of the plastic values of the visual image. The effect of this period continues to influence my sense of color harmony even now...
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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2022) 18 (2): 264–266.
Published: 01 July 2022
... of an archetypal gesture of concern, exceeds or refuses political parameters, or is remotely creative or subversive. This confusion speaks to an unresolved tension throughout the book about what counts as a gesture of concern, what it is that gestures of concern do, and to what extent we can judge them...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2023) 19 (3): 430–432.
Published: 01 November 2023
... mechanisms on which to base, guide, and determine their choices; otherwise the retaining or removing of a statue will depend on the undemocratic decisions of a coterie of bureaucrats and judges, or even a mob of protestors and vigilantes. Curiously, as the central focus of the book, monuments...