Results 121 to 130 of about 360 (152)
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2018
This chapter analyzes the case of the Austrian University Professor Beiglböck who led lethal medical experiments on Roma and Sinti in the Dachau concentration camp during the NS regime. It traces the emergence of the “gypsy” as the paradigmatic figure of what Giorgio Agamben termed homo sacer—from being declared as vogelfrei in the fifteenth century to
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This chapter analyzes the case of the Austrian University Professor Beiglböck who led lethal medical experiments on Roma and Sinti in the Dachau concentration camp during the NS regime. It traces the emergence of the “gypsy” as the paradigmatic figure of what Giorgio Agamben termed homo sacer—from being declared as vogelfrei in the fifteenth century to
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Structural and functional complexity of HSP90 in cellular homeostasis and disease
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2023Gabriela Chiosis +2 more
exaly
Initial Upper Palaeolithic Homo sapiens from Bacho Kiro Cave, Bulgaria
Nature, 2020Jean-Jacques Hublin +2 more
exaly
Psycho-Politics: Giorgi Agamben Homo Sacer as the Homo Psychologicus
2013Alexis de Tocqueville writes in “Democracy in America” that democracy relaxes social bonds but tightens natural bonds (2004, p. 691). Making redundant the old social structures of hierarchy and formality, democracy would make possible spontaneous, direct and natural social relations.
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In the work of Giorgio Agamben, the enigmatic figure of homo sacer appears. The life of this "sacred man" can be killed with impunity, but not sacrificed. Using the method of philosophical archaeology, Agamben dusts off the origin of some philosophical, political and religious concepts in order to shed light on the hidden mechanisms and structures of ...
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