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Published: 01 June 2021
Fig. 10. When asked how living in the same community with people of the other race compared to what they had first expected, most people felt indifferent on the subject. More
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2020) 29 (2): 285–307.
Published: 01 December 2020
... at coming to tolerate the disagreeing community of the autoimmune body as it challenges normalized notions of what self and other, immunity and community, ease and disease mean. What then is the link between the relationality of disagreeing bodies and actually practicing a form of care that is more self...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (2): 373–385.
Published: 01 December 2022
...Joseph Albernaz Abstract This text on Jean-Luc Nancy engages his interest in the motif of departure to reexamine and register the importance of some of his central contributions. Along with returning to Nancy’s singular rendering of key concepts like finitude, sharing, communism, and resurrection...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (2): 383–422.
Published: 01 December 2017
...Helga Tawil-Souri Taking the checkpoint as anthropological site and as a symbol from which to analyze the relationship to time and communication, this article shows how Palestinian temporality is distorted. A detailed description of the temporality engendered in the spaces of the checkpoint—through...
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Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (2): 305–307.
Published: 01 December 2022
.... In this short piece, written five years after his groundbreaking La communauté désoeuvrée , Nancy takes up the question of teaching and its inherent entwinement, as he argues, with “the work of thought.” Teaching is here understood much like Nancy’s community: not as what stems from collaboration...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2021) 30 (2): 367–386.
Published: 01 December 2021
... in an unfulfilled past and a home to which a community based on shared positions, not identity, can return. The argument is based on an exegetical approach to an ur-document in transnational post-Yugoslav literature, Ugrešić’s 1997 novel The Museum of Unconditional Surrender , as well as on a key distinction...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (1): 7–26.
Published: 01 June 2022
... the transmission of mind through the channels of linguistic form, meter, and rhyme. Neither the ghost nor the poem exists except in or as its mediations, yet through these mediations, both the ghost and the poem become present and are communicated into the world. While contemporary media theory has identified...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2023) 32 (2): 301–339.
Published: 01 December 2023
...Shane Denson Abstract Since at least the nineteenth century seriality and serialization have been among the most important formal and narrative strategies for popular media cultures and their negotiations with the radical changes brought on by industrialization and new communication technologies...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2023) 32 (2): 395–428.
Published: 01 December 2023
... truly be “really subsumed” under capital. The article concludes by pondering the political dimension to these theories of autonomy, which mirror in important ways debates within communization circles over subsumption, programmatism, and the aesthetics of revolution. [email protected]...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (2): 189–229.
Published: 01 December 2022
... of reading photographs that is attentive to subtext, nonverbal communication, and social codes. The essay argues that this reading practice has nothing to do with postcolonial or Levantine hybridity or with a “migratory state of mind”—concepts that govern scholarship on Matalon—and that its subsistence...
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Journal Article
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (1): 155–170.
Published: 01 June 2017
...Tina M. Campt What changes in our understanding of the experience of black communities in diaspora when we move beyond the binaries of stillness and motion to engage black life through the lens of stasis? This essay explores a collection of vernacular photos of a black German family in the Third...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2020) 29 (1): 15–24.
Published: 01 June 2020
...Judith Butler Abstract Indefinite detention is a legal norm and practice that is increasingly acceptable throughout the world. It consists of arrest and forcible detention without a clear communication of crimes committed, and it can last indefinitely, since it deprives the detained of recourse...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2018) 27 (1): 199–231.
Published: 01 June 2018
...-determined autonomy. In its reading of the interactive installation through the lens of systems theory, however, this article qualifies autonomy as at once distributed and communally managed yet sensitive to the ways in which infrastructures of wireless technologies are deeply imbricated in lived social...
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Published: 01 June 2021
Fig. 8. Map of Addison Terrace divided by areas and racial composition of each area. The areas were divided by the laundries (marked by the dots). Reproduced from Robert K. Merton, “Community Facilities at Addison Terrace,” 1947, Robert K. Merton Papers, 1928–2003, MS 1439, Box 207, folder 20 More
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (2): 297–304.
Published: 01 December 2022
... of, and collaborating with filmmakers such as Claire Denis and Phillip Warnell. However, if one can be excused for a bit of barbarism, we might adjoin Nancy the philosopher to the force of a very particular set of questions: indeed, the questions of community, of what is shared, of what is singular versus what...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2010) 18 (2): 29–54.
Published: 01 December 2010
... to a symbolic order that projects the male/fe- male dichotomy onto the wider realm of nature and the time-space cosmos. At the smallest level of the community or ayllu, women have participated in creating and enacting symbolic and kinship systems, using their voices to shape the communal...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2015) 23 (2): 55–87.
Published: 01 December 2015
... nds its virtual Elysium in the profi le pages of online dating sites.3 At fi rst glance, queer social media, including hookup apps such as Grindr and Scruff, would appear to be no dif- ferent.4 They too seem the refuge and breeding ground for neolib- eral subjectivity, communication...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 19 (2): 223–251.
Published: 01 December 2011
... are hard-wired into one’s natural existence as a human being, when in fact politics takes form as the artifi ce of speaking and acting as a member of an organized community, for example, as a citizen of a nation-state, something quite different from be- ing a member of a biological species...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2009) 18 (1): 111–180.
Published: 01 June 2009
... could be said of the Egyptian Book of the Dead, the Indian Upanishads, the corpus of Buddhist texts, the Islamic Qur’an, or other texts consid- ered sacred, and often held to be direct revelation, by their respec- tive communities). Within the structure of the university...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (2): 309–318.
Published: 01 December 2022
... . 3 ☾ ☾ ☾ This audacity of Nancy should not surprise us. To experience its force is to return again and again to the series of last reflections that he left us from a time when death and suffering “communized us”—to use his phrase from Un trop humain virus —at a pan-demic scale: “le...