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epistolary subject
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Journal Article
differences (2024) 35 (3): 139–149.
Published: 01 December 2024
...Leigh Gilmore This article reads the decades-long correspondence between Hannah Arendt and Mary McCarthy as an account, following Judith Butler. Specifically, it argues that an epistolary subject emerges through the shared act of durational witness enacted in letter writing. Reading...
Journal Article
differences (2018) 29 (3): 58–85.
Published: 01 December 2018
... reverting and passing beyond the meaning it poses,” attempting “to dodge the immobilizing terms that Abelard has placed on their experience.” 7 Kauffman understands the epistolary genre as essential for deciphering the subject in love as a dialogic text. Her reading of Heloise’s letters “reevaluates...
Journal Article
differences (2022) 33 (2-3): 110–140.
Published: 01 December 2022
... computing is autophilic, one that demands us to touch (and touch ourselves) rather than bracket or remove embodiment and haptics, as is held by Pommier (see Hodge, “Screwed” and “Subject” ; Hodge, Davis, and Bresland ). The idea that exchanging the dream screen for Zoom would somehow disallow...
Journal Article
differences (2017) 28 (1): 37–63.
Published: 01 May 2017
... own time and manner” (362). In the second mode, the memoir, “the subject of the adventures relates his own story” (362) and is confined to what he knew and to what he might be supposed to remember at a distance of years. The “third way [. . .], that of epistolary correspondence , carried on between...
Journal Article
differences (2024) 35 (3): 1–13.
Published: 01 December 2024
...: Toward a Queer of Color Critique . Minneapolis : U of Minnesota P , 2003 . Gill-Peterson Jules . “ Who Is the Subject of Gender of Gender Self-Determination? ” Bradway 202 – 23 . Gilmore Leigh . “ Giving and Epistolary Account of Oneself: Hannah Arendt and Mary McCarthy...
Journal Article
differences (2024) 35 (3): 224–236.
Published: 01 December 2024
... shadows,” the kind that do not go away and that run counter to every expectation of “illumination.” The shadow is not exactly an image, but it sidles up to every illuminated picture, sometimes crossing the canvas. It may be that discourse that returns again and again to the same point, subject...
Journal Article
differences (1994) 6 (1): 69–97.
Published: 01 April 1994
.... In the Ismaelillo this is articulated from the outset in the epistolary dedication: "Hijo: Espantando de todo me refugio en tie Tengo fe en el mejoramiento humano, en la vida futura, en la utilidad de la virtud, d fferences 73 y en ti" ("Son: Horrified about everything I take refuge in you. I have faith...
Journal Article
differences (2016) 27 (2): 62–78.
Published: 01 September 2016
... elusive, apparently: The Program for the Study of Sexual Difference. That name would reach back to its intellectual origins in psychoanalysis with its formulation of the problem of the subject-in-difference-with-the-advance-of-modernity (a modernity that we must understand as coterminous with, indeed...
Journal Article
differences (2023) 34 (1): 156–164.
Published: 01 May 2023
... rapport with others (human and nonhuman) and with the world. This is one of the fundamental propositions at the heart of Leo Bersani’s work, a starting point for his radical dismantling of Western philosophy’s thinking on the individual subject from Plato to Descartes, Freud to Levinas and Lacan (and many...
Journal Article
differences (1995) 7 (2): 16–40.
Published: 01 July 1995
..., and the Transsexual Text .” Writing the Female Voice: Essays on Epistolary Literature . Ed. Goldsmith Elizabeth C. . Boston : Northeastern UP , 1989 . 135 – 153 . Epstein William H. John Cleland: Images of a Life . New York : Columbia UP , 1974 . Evans Hilary . Harlots, Whores...
Journal Article
differences (2001) 12 (2): 70–85.
Published: 01 September 2001
... in interfering, or rather taking risks, with
language” (16); he can also assert, however, that “in the case of délire,
language is master” (9). Perhaps such an uncertainty surrounding the
question of how the subject is disposed...
Journal Article
differences (2022) 33 (2-3): 90–109.
Published: 01 December 2022
... subjectivity are mediated by the contingent spatial aesthetics of the clinic in moments of revolutionary struggle. It brings clinical uses of the psychoanalytic frame by Frantz Fanon, Wulf Sachs, Marie Langer, and Juan Carlos Volnovich into conversation with Derrida’s conceptualization of the parergon...
Journal Article
differences (2022) 33 (2-3): 220–241.
Published: 01 December 2022
... pensive woman reassuring us with them of what fate spares us” (385). Lacan evokes the most famous line from Montesquieu’s Lettres Persanes (1721): “Comment peut-on être persan?”: How can anyone be Persian? In Montesquieu’s epistolary novel, Rica—a Persian correspondent in Paris—poses the question...
Journal Article
differences (1996) 8 (3): 53–78.
Published: 01 November 1996
... no necessary relation to the ontological genus of a thing but are only concerned to know things insofar as they can be known on the basis of others. The proportional relation between subjects of comparison (their syntax) is thus the same as their inherent meaning. A linguistic constructivist approach...
Journal Article
differences (1991) 3 (2): 21–38.
Published: 01 July 1991
... have always been in with sex: any unprotected sexual encounter now always carries with it the possibility of life or death." 15 I thought, indeed, about both this street level (balcony level?) exchange and this very powerful epistolary observation a good deal. Was I anxious about AIDS? Constantly...
Journal Article
differences (2023) 34 (3): 106–128.
Published: 01 December 2023
... Levi responded to these challenges is the subject of this essay, which considers how and why Levi, in what would become his last work, turns to the gray zone and the duplicitous figure of Chaim Rumkowski in an effort to encourage his young readers to reckon with the very thing they most wanted...
Journal Article
differences (2008) 19 (1): 1–31.
Published: 01 May 2008
... the conventions and notations of such proletarian internationalist feminist texts from the global South, focusing specifically on the figure of a dispersed collective subject. It brings together contemporary protest literature published by Dabindu --a collective comprised of garment factory worker-activists...
Journal Article
differences (2005) 16 (1): 24–62.
Published: 01 May 2005
..., to the scene of anatomization
toward the end of my essay, in the hopes of mediating, through William
Hogarth’s serial images, the stakes of this peculiar analogy. Admittedly,
my principal subject seldom appears in Benjamin’s writings...
Journal Article
differences (1999) 11 (3): 1–28.
Published: 01 December 1999
... sense of social
decorum, nor either heroine’s exquisite awareness of sexual propriety.
With the epistolary dimension gone, we are left with the double truth that
impermissible desire is perfectly natural in a male, so long...
Journal Article
differences (2006) 17 (2): 1–32.
Published: 01 September 2006
... Difference . Trans. Carolyn Burke and Gillian C. Gill. Ithaca: Cornell up, 1993 . ____. This Sex Which Is Not One . Trans. Catherine Porter. Ithaca: Cornell up, 1985 . ____. Why Different? A Culture of Two Subjects . Trans. Camille Collins. New York: Semiotext(e), 2000 . Kanze Nobumitsu...
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