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Journal Article
the minnesota review (2011) 2011 (77): 62–86.
Published: 01 November 2011
...’”—to the four of his late work. Reading Lacan with Greimas helps us understand better both what is imagined and what is really at stake in current debates over theory and scholarship in the humanities. © 2011 Virginia Tech 2011 Works Cited Althusser Louis . 1971 . Lenin and Philosophy...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2017) 2017 (88): 127–128.
Published: 01 May 2017
... sandwiches from foil drink coffee from flasks and we all watch the sun stoop low. A whole whale underground and a stoop to lift reach under it why never only ever do it when you really really need it through the whispered clouds what do we have? Only times of harsh clenching when this is not one...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2006) 2006 (67): 105–122.
Published: 01 November 2006
.... It’s not that we don’t think about that—of course we do—but we’re a reflection of the imperfect meritocracy of the academy. The best ideas get 106 the minnesota review published. That’s really what we’re about, and I don’t think you can say that of commercial...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2012) 2012 (79): 44–46.
Published: 01 November 2012
... © 2012 by Virginia Tech 2012 the minnesota review loves . . . Favorite things of the creative writing editors the minnesota review loves: Gluttony Hmurph. We really need to unfasten these khakis. Don’t worry, we’ll leave our napkin in our lap. Marph. H’whooo. Hoo, hoo...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2013) 2013 (81): 79–101.
Published: 01 November 2013
...- ogy of postpolitics is wrong and really misleading. Elsewhere I’ve lumped together Rancière with Chantal Mouffe, Wendy Brown, and Žižek. This is not a general criticism of them but a specific critique among comrades and friends, a criticism about why I reject this one term, postpolitics...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2006) 2006 (65-66): 133–148.
Published: 01 November 2006
... they did was "seat-of-the-pants publishing"; we have our own ideas, they told me, but we don't do market research, and we can't really tell you who reads these books. In 1980, this was still largely true. I was about to conclude that I couldn't really study actual readers when one of those...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2013) 2013 (81): 126–146.
Published: 01 November 2013
... the state is really useful. I think his most inter- esting statements about governmentality are at the beginning of Abnormal (2003). He points out the discrepancy between the model of the state that comes from canonical political and legal theory —​it’s coherent and orderly and so forth —​and he...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2007) 2007 (68): 91–105.
Published: 01 May 2007
... thought it was really interesting; I was in a kind of middle zone, taking an anthropological stance and looking at my advisors and faculty on the one hand, and my peers as graduate students on the other. Williams What year was that? Schamus That would have been in 82-83...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2011) 2011 (76): 81–96.
Published: 01 May 2011
... portrayed an injustice but, of course, homelessness is worse now than when that film was made. With Cathy Come Home, we were adopted by people with whom we really didn’t feel we had much in common. I think that was influential in pushing our little group to the left; we were social democrats when we...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2009) 2009 (71-72): 63–86.
Published: 01 May 2009
... actually to secure peace. He had a lot of trouble with censorship, but he says in Perpetual Peace that the secret article of a perpetual peace between nations is that the rulers will let philosophers speak freely, because they really do have something to offer. When we get...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2006) 2006 (67): 85–103.
Published: 01 November 2006
... with the same project of Public Access. There’s a line in Public Access somewhere about how the first job is to scrape off the nonsense that has been said about us, then get around to explaining what it is we really do. I actually didn’t start Liberal Arts with that in mind; I...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2005) 2005 (63-64): 141–157.
Published: 01 May 2005
... the basic constituents of the the minnesota review crisis, which I think everybody understands but which nobody is willing to do anything about. 'Williams What are the basic constituents of the crisis? Wissoker Nobody makes money on scholarly book publishing. Nobody ever really has, so presses...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2012) 2012 (78): 83–94.
Published: 01 May 2012
... would say, in his case, a kind of bourgeois 86 the minnesota review anti-imperialism, the relationship even to communism and to Soviet Communism —​all of those things, really, and, of course, his role as a political intellectual but also as a writer. I am not a novelist or any­ thing, but I...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2009) 2010 (73-74): 133–163.
Published: 01 November 2009
... it can’t really be true that I wasn’t intrigued by it, but for me it was the informatics of domination that was the super-label, not postmodernism. Postmodern was one little cell in the table; it wasn’t the label. Modern/postmodern was a contrast that made sense when you...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2013) 2013 (81): 102–125.
Published: 01 November 2013
... of feminist political theorists. Honig  I’m not sure if the premise that there’s a rise in political theory is correct, actually. I do think a lot of people are doing really interest- ing work in political theory, but I notice, for example, that all the people you’re interviewing for this one...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2005) 2005 (63-64): 61–80.
Published: 01 May 2005
..., that's a lot of money. I want to be real clear on this to a university that had declining enrollment, you bring in fifty new students, that's really important. The last time we checked, of those original fifty, I think twenty- five or thirty actually made it through a complete program of study...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2015) 2015 (84): 4–5.
Published: 01 May 2015
... trying to name the prettiest aunt because it’s prettiness that counts when it comes to aunts, and to sunsets, to women poets, and feminist selfies, the golden lioness. Sisterhood is really something. Cousinhood is really something. Rooms full of women poets on the Internet in the glass...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2005) 2005 (63-64): 179–193.
Published: 01 May 2005
... transition from "roots" to "routes." I myself really wanted to get away from epistemological questions, and abstract language like—God help us—"prejudice" and "racial attitudes," as though dealing with race were a bourgeois matter of getting your head on straight. Instead, I wanted to look...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2009) 2009 (71-72): 101–122.
Published: 01 May 2009
...: it was just that these other people in those other graduate programs were refusing to shut down their operations, causing the surplus. If you understand what is really happening, which is structural casualization up and down the chain, it’s not just graduate students who are being...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2007) 2007 (68): 67–74.
Published: 01 May 2007
... the rights of other women. They don’t have the rights that they deserve. There is really no reason to support that government, but I am not so naive to say, “OK, let’s attack Iran, bomb it, change the regime.” I don’t want a regime change by America in Iran. If any regime...