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  • - Aesthetics, Politics, Philosophy
     
    288,95 kr.

    This special issue of Paragraph brings together new essays on the work of Jacques Ranciere by thinkers from a range of disciplines and critical perspectives.

  • af Lisa Downing
    278,95 kr.

    About the author: Lisa Downing is Professor of French Discourses of Sexuality at the University of Birmingham. Her most recent book-length publications are After Foucault, as editor (Cambridge University Press, 2018) and Selfish Women (Routledge, 2019). She is currently completing a monograph-manifesto, entitled Against Affect, funded in 2021-2 by a Leverhulme Trust Fellowship.

  • - Paragraph, Volume 44, Issue 1
    af MCKEANE JOHN
    268,95 kr.

    Sarah Kofman and the Relief of Philosophy addresses Kofman's relations with her contemporary Jacques Derrida, but also her readings of psychoanalysis, music, Shakespeare, and more. The volume closes with a previously untranslated text of hers interpreting Nietzsche and Voltaire's responses to natural catastrophe.

  • - Paragraph Volume 24 Number 2
    af Wright
    273,95 kr.

    Represnts the first collection of critical responses to be made to the work of Slavoj Zizek.

  • - Paragraph Volume 23, Issue 3
    af Dobson
    273,95 kr.

    Aims both to reflect and to foster the extraordinary ongoing impact of Helene Cixous's writing across a wide spectrum of academic disciplines and literary forms

  • - Paragraph, Volume 42, Issue 3
     
    263,95 kr.

    The special issue responds to two concurrent phenomena: the re-emergence in the 21st century of religion as a political and cultural force, and its resurgence in a range of theoretical discourses, from postsecularism to New Atheism. Mirroring this theoretical and cultural turn, cinema across the world is renewing its acquaintance with religion as private practice, public display and political force and exploring overlapping material, spiritual and doctrinal concerns in the new millennium. This issue probes intersections between contemporary cinema and diverse theoretical, philosophical and theological engagements with religion. It compares cinema's capacity to present visual expressions of faith, evoke embodied experience and varied modalities of love, correlate earthly and divine realities and inspire belief and doubt with writings on religion and postsecularism. Contributors explore ideas about transcendence, vocation, affliction, love, doubt and forms of religious practice and expression that connect specific films with theoretical accounts that look beyond the secular. Key Features -Covers a wide range of cinemas from the United States, France, Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia and China. -Juxtaposes responses to Judaeo-Christian thought with Islamic feminism, theology from the Arab-speaking world and Buddhist ethics. -Situates recent films within traditions of idiosyncratic thinking about God that stretch back to the work of Søren Kierkegaard and Simone Weil. -Challenges the established (male, white) canon of religious film criticism and filmmakers, from Carl Theodor Dreyer and Robert Bresson to Bruno Dumont and Lars von Trier. Libby Saxton is Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at Queen Mary, University of London. She is author of Haunted Images: Film, Ethics, Testimony and the Holocaust (Wallflower, 2008), co-author of Film and Ethics: Foreclosed Encounters (Routledge, 2010) and co-editor of Holocaust Intersections: Genocide and Visual Culture at the New Millennium (Legenda: 2013). She is writing a book on iconic images, photography and cinema. Anat Pick is Reader in Film Studies at Queen Mary, University of London. She is author of Creaturely Poetics: Animality and Vulnerability in Literature and Film (Columbia University Press, 2011), co-editor of Screening Nature: Cinema Beyond the Human (Berghahn, 2013), and has published articles on animals, ethics and film. Her new book project is on the philosopher and mystic Simone Weil and cinema.

  • - A Special Issue of the Journal "Paragraph"
     
    288,95 kr.

    Luce Irigaray presents international, intercultural, intergenerational dialogues around her work in this collection of essays on Irigaray's work by an intergenerational, international range of contributors. Each paper is followed by questions from Irigaray and then a response by the author of the paper.

  •  
    283,95 kr.

    This is a special issue of the journal Paragraph.

  • - Paragraph Special Issue (Vol 37, Issue 2)
     
    243,95 kr.

    An exploration of Francophone communities from the 19th century to the present. It is a collection of ten articles that provides an opportunity to explore Francophone communities from a range of perspectives which similarly engage with the most pressing questions in Francophone-Caribbean studies and postcolonial studies more generally.

  •  
    298,95 kr.

    This special issue of Paragraph brings together differing approaches (from a diverse range of disciplines) to the question of the representation of men's bodies in twentieth-century visual culture.

  •  
    283,95 kr.

    This collection features work by some of the most important and innovative thinkers and writers in the field, including a new poem by Assia Djebar.

  • - Prostitution in Edinburgh and Glasgow, 1900-1939
    af Louise (University of Edinburgh) Settle
    253,95 kr.

    Sex for Sale in Scotland examines the various methods that were used to police female prostitution in Edinburgh and Glasgow between 1900 and 1939, with particular emphasis on the experiences of the women involved.

  •  
    438,95 kr.

    This is a special issue of Paragraph looking at the work of Genet.

  •  
    258,95 kr.

    This volume traces rhythm in literature as it unfolds in the work of writers since the 'crisis of verse'.

  • - Giving Space, Taking Time
     
    278,95 kr.

    An interdisciplinary study of the interface between ethical ideals and worldly demands.

  • - Reading the College De France Lectures
     
    253,95 kr.

    This Special Issue of the journal Paragraph proposes a new reading of the College de France Lectures of Roland Barthes.

  •  
    258,95 kr.

    As a writer of fiction, a literary critic, thinker and political commentator, Maurice Blanchot fulfilled some of his century's most pressing challenges. In the centenary year of his birth, this volume considers these questions from a variety of approaches, and addresses the significance of Blanchot's writing for the times to come.

  • - Paragraph, Volume 43, Issue 3
    af Cooper Sarah
    396,95 kr.

    Brings together an international range of film scholars whose current research engages with contrasting theoretical and philosophical approaches to imagination.In contemporary film theory, cognitivist specialists have demonstrated the most sustained interest in imagination, pioneering an earlier wave of scholarship on this topic, principally with reference to spectatorship. In the 1990s, investigations into identification and mental simulation on the part of spectators (Gregory Currie) and the theorization of viewers as imaginative agents (Murray Smith) spearheaded just some of the studies of imagining as a cognitive process, which took as their principal object of analysis mainstream cinema. This volume acknowledges the inspiration of earlier cognitivist accounts and is not conceived as a break with the old. It does seek, though, to explore questions that were not covered in that earlier research and thereby further cognitive enquiry, as well as open consideration of film and imagination to other theories and philosophies, in addition to a broader selection of films.Key Features. Features discussion of theoretical and philosophical explorations of imagination as they relate to questions of spectatorship, film form, and cinematographic time.. Ranging widely in historical and geographical purview, and intersecting with political and especially ethical concerns where relevant.. Includes solely theoretical pieces in addition to close analyses of particular films, with examples from documentary through art house and experimental to narrative cinema.. The contributors have contrasting takes on the relation between film and imagination, but all are united in recognizing its richness as a topic for current and future research.Sarah Cooper is Professor of Film Studies at King's College London. Her books include Selfless Cinema?: Ethics and French Documentary (Oxford: Legenda, 2006); Chris Marker (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2008); The Soul of Film Theory (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013); and Film and the Imagined Image (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, forthcoming 2019).

  •  
    263,95 kr.

    Explores a series of unsung - and sometimes counterintuitive - resonances between second-wave feminism and queer theory in both Anglophone and Francophone contexts.

  • - Paragraph Volume 40, Issue 3
    af Elissa Marder
    263,95 kr.

    Inspired by Shoshana Felman s 1977 volume, Literature and Psychoanalysis: The Question of Reading (Otherwise")

  •  
    283,95 kr.

    This collection brings together essays on Deleuze and Guattari's treatment of science in A Thousand Plateaus and What is Philosophy?, as well as looking in detail at scientific issues such as emergence, complexity theory and non-linear dynamics.