Results 171 to 180 of about 51,488 (221)
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Giorgio Agamben

2020
Goetz Ottmann, Iris Silva Brito
exaly   +4 more sources

Giorgio Agamben’s genealogy of office

European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology, 2017
This paper offers a historical redescription of the genealogy of office presented in Giorgio Agamben’s Opus Dei: An archaeology of duty. Agamben’s treatment of the Christian liturgy as the source of the modern concept of office is described as a Heideggerian allegory grounded in a metaphysical history of being.
openaire   +4 more sources

Psychoanalysis, Trauma, and Giorgio Agamben

The Psychoanalytic Review, 2022
The author uses the work of Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben to reimagine the meaning and dynamics of trauma, as well as psychoanalysis as a process that remedies, in part, traumatic experiences. More particularly, trauma is conceptualized in terms of Agamben's notions of potentiality, singularity/suchness, and inoperativity, although these are ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Giorgio Agamben.

2019
Flügel-Martinsen, Oliver   +4 more
  +6 more sources

The Profanations of Giorgio Agamben

2022
Agamben is hard to pin down both theologically and philosophically. He attempts to construct miraculous minutiae out of un-miraculous things. Hence this work is the act of profaning the unprofanable. What ontological stature, what imaginative configuration and what spatio-temporal coordinates this move articulates are less than forthcoming.
openaire   +1 more source

The Work of Giorgio Agamben

2008
Giorgio Agamben has emerged, in the past five years, as one of the most important continental philosophers. This burgeoning popularity of his work has largely been confined to a study of the homo sacer series. Yet these later 'political' works have their foundation in Agamben's earlier works on the philosophy of language, aesthetics and literature ...
Clemens, Justin   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Fracture: Giorgio Agamben

2008
The principle according to which each major attempt to redeploy the concept of nihilism since Nietzsche entails a turning of that concept back against the very thinker or thinkers from whom it is inherited is arguably nowhere more evident than in the work of the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben.
openaire   +1 more source

Agamben, Giorgio (1942–)

2018
Born in Rome in 1942, Giorgio Agamben is one of the most important and influential figures in contemporary continental philosophy. Profoundly influenced by both Martin Heidegger and Walter Benjamin, he has been publishing books since L’uomo senza contenuto (The Man Without Content) was released in 1970.
openaire   +1 more source

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