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Recipes to Rona
  • Language: en

Recipes to Rona

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1979
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

After Life
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 213

After Life

Dreams and fantasies of immorality date back to the first human being who was expelled from the Garden of Eden and fell into time, as Augustine recounts. Falling into time, into mortality, living with the consciousness of death and the decline of the body, bear a terrifying—and yet for some pacifying—burden that comes with the weight of being human. Today, with the advancement of technology, accompanied by the emergence of trends such as posthumanism and transhumanism, the idea of overcoming death is presented as no longer a mere fantasy, but a legitimate discursive stance. While death is often seen as the Muse of philosophy, what would it mean (philosophically and psychically) to live in a world where death is no longer necessary? After Life: Recent Philosophy and Death is a collection of 11 essays addressing the place of death and its denial from a philosophical, psychoanalytic and literary perspectives. This collection offers contemporary and fresh insights on these timely questions. It was originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.

Sigalit Landau : The salt years
  • Language: de

Sigalit Landau : The salt years

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-08-29
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Das Video der salzverkrusteten Schuhe, das Sigalit Landau auf der Venedig Biennale 2011 zeigte, machte die Künstlerin schlagartig weltberühmt. Landau hängte Stiefel ins Tote Meer und setzte die nun salzverkrusteten Objekte anschließend in Danzig auf die Eisdecke eines zugefrorenen Sees. Der langsame Schmelzprozess des Eises und das finale Versinken der Stiefel stehen für Erinnerung und Trauer, Vergänglichkeit und Vergangenheitsbewältigung. Ebenso verweist die Künstlerin auf die zerbrechliche und tödliche Schönheit der Kunst. In der Publikation reflektiert Landau ihre über zehn Jahre andauernde, intensive Auseinandersetzung mit dem Toten Meer in einem großartigen Spektrum an Bildern, Filmmaterial, Interviews, Notizen sowie begleitenden Essays der Autoren Dorothée Brill, Rona Cohen und Michal Ben-Naftali.

The Air Force Law Review
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

The Air Force Law Review

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Improbable Swervings of Atoms
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 104

The Improbable Swervings of Atoms

Winner of the 2004 Donald Hall Prize in PoetryThe Improbable Swervings of Atoms follows the comedic, often painful, physical and emotional travails of a young boy growing up in 1950s America. He watches the McCarthy hearings, conquers the Congo, assassinates the president, has his head stuffed into a toilet, drops his uniform on the fifty-yard line, and tries to make sense of Lucretius's De Rerum Natura. The poems engage history in a very intimate way, revealing how a boy, as he matures, attempts to understand the world around him, his own physical development, the people in his life, and what it means to live in a country and time where it is impossible to disengage oneself from world events—where, in fact, the quest for identity is an act that requires one to rewrite history in personal terms.

Electronic Waste
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 300
The Lobotomy Letters
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 180

The Lobotomy Letters

The rise and widespread acceptance of psychosurgery constitutes one of the most troubling chapters in the history of modern medicine. By the late 1950s, tens of thousands of Americans had been lobotomized as treatment for a host of psychiatric disorders. Though the procedure would later be decried as devastating and grossly unscientific, many patients, families, and physicians reported veritable improvement from the surgery; some patients were even considered cured. The Lobotomy Letters gives an account of why this controversial procedure was sanctioned by psychiatrists and doctors of modern medicine. Drawing from original correspondence penned by lobotomy patients and their families as well as from the professional papers of lobotomy pioneer and neurologist Walter Freeman, the volume reconstructs how physicians, patients, and their families viewed lobotomy and analyzes the reasons for its overwhelming use. Mical Raz, MD/PhD, is a physician and historian of medicine.

Philosophy with Clarice Lispector
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 218

Philosophy with Clarice Lispector

This book examines Clarice Lispector’s body of work, foregrounding its theoretical insights and exploring its philosophical questions, which are placed in conversation with a range of theoretical frameworks and approaches. Contributions to this volume engage with the philosophical dimension of one of the most important writers of the twentieth century. The book features essays by renowned and emerging philosophers and literary critics from multiple parts of the world, which examine Lispector’s different novels, chronicles, and short stories, acknowledging their inherent theoretical claims and placing them in contact with other relevant theoretical angles. They develop conversations betwe...

After Modernism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 318

After Modernism

While celebrating the centenary of the “annus mirabilis” of modernism, we now encounter modernism after postmodernist, poststructuralist, postcolonial, critical race, feminist, queer and trans writing and theory. Out of the figures, narratives and concepts they have developed, a less universal, more global, decentred, context-specific, interconnected modernism emerges. In “after modernism” the meanings of “after” include periodisation, homage and critique. This book attends to neglected genealogies and intertexts—“high” and “low,” yet offering unacknowledged ontological, epistemological, conceptual and figurative resources. How have artists of the Global South negotiate...

The First Inhabitants of Arcadia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 137

The First Inhabitants of Arcadia

Herman Melville, Matthew Arnold, Sarah Orne Jewett, Dusty Rhodes, and Hoyt Wilhelm skinny-dip and pick up gondoliers and cut figure eights into the ice in Christopher Bursk's new collection. But the main cast of characters for these poems is the alphabet itself, "the first inhabitants of Arcadia, / now homesick, curious exiles from Eden." Here are a boy's first investigations into the nature of language as he studies the backs of baseball cards, and a young man's infatuation with the "F-word". The poems carry us from the picket line and a county jail and the canals of Venice all the way to a hotel room and a father's suicide note. They conclude with September 11 and a confrontation of the po...