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Lucie Mercier [4]Lucie Kim-Chi Mercier [4]Lucie K. Mercier [1]
  1.  47
    Michel serres’s Leibnizian structuralism.Lucie Kim-Chi Mercier - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (6):3-21.
    In this article I examine Michel Serres’s seminal study of Leibniz: Le Système de Leibniz et ses modèles mathématiques, a book which, in spite of its significance, has never been dis...
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  2.  47
    Introduction to Serres on Transdisciplinarity.Lucie Mercier - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (5-6):37-40.
    Excerpted from an article on Leibniz first published in 1974 in Hermès III, la Traduction, Michel Serres’s ‘Transdisciplinarity as Relative Exteriority’ offers a synoptic view of Serres’s vision of the relationship between philosophy and the sciences. Serres charts four historical strategies by which philosophy has secured its theoretical control over the sciences, four versions of philosophical exteriority towards the scientific field. He contrasts this topography or philosophical ‘theatre’ of representation to Leibniz’s immanent relation to scientific discourse. A systematic whole without (...)
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  3.  9
    Response to Robert Bernasconi's “Slavery's absence from histories of moral and political philosophy”.Lucie K. Mercier - 2024 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 62 (S1):68-71.
    I focus in this response on what I take to be Bernasconi's proposal to dissolve and reframe moral and political philosophies around the problematic of slavery. Insofar as, in the wake of Afro-diasporic and Black radical thought, it offers us one version of an argument that has now touched virtually all aspects of modern European philosophy, how are we to understand the specific orientations of Bernasconi's approach? Reading Bernasconi's article, I comment on the following points: (1) the notion of “absence” (...)
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  4.  37
    Warding Off the Ghosts of Race in the Historiography of Philosophy.Lucie Kim-Chi Mercier - 2022 - Critical Philosophy of Race 10 (1):22-47.
    This article contends that an adequate investigation of the role and effects of race in the history of philosophy requires an elucidation of the ways in which the history of philosophy functions as a “territorial” structure. This argument is developed through an extensive cross-examination of Peter Park's Africa, Asia and the History of Philosophy: Racism in the Formation of the Philosophical Canon 1780–1830 and Catherine König-Pralong's La colonie philosophique. Écrire l'histoire de la philosophie aux XVIIIe et XIXe siècles. I show (...)
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  5.  19
    Fanon's Pantheons. Book Review of 'What Fanon said : a philosophical introduction to his life and thought' by Lewis R. Gordon and 'Frantz Fanon, philosopher of the barricades' by Peter Hudis.Lucie Kim-Chi Mercier - 2016 - Radical Philosophy 198:44-46.
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  6.  44
    (1 other version)Modern European Philosophy.Lucie Mercier & George Tomlinson - 2018 - The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory 26 (1):346-367.
    This chapter reviews three of the most consequential works in modern European philosophy published in 2017: Étienne Balibar’s Citizen Subject, Nick Nesbitt’s edited volume The Concept in Crisis, and William Clare Roberts’s Marx’s Inferno. These works reflect the fact that 2017 witnessed an upsurge of philosophical publications on Marx and Marxism. On one level, this is because 2017 was simultaneously the 150-year anniversary of the publication of the first volume of Marx’s Capital and the 100-year anniversary of the Russian Revolution. (...)
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  7. The Inside Passage : Translation as Method and Relation in Serres and Benjamin.Lucie Kim-Chi Mercier - 2015 - Dissertation, Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy, Kingston University, London
    The central premise of this thesis is that translation has acquired a new meaning in so-­called postcolonial times and that this transformation calls forth a renewal of the philosophical conceptualisation of translation. I begin by distinguising between two different philosophical genealogies of translation in modern European philosophy. The first is a Romantic and hermeneutic lineage, in which translation is closely bound to the movement of culture, and conceived of as an ‘experience of the foreign’. The second is a relational genealogy (...)
     
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  8.  22
    (1 other version)Book Review of: 'Dictionary of untranslatables : a philosophical lexicon' by Barbara Cassin. [REVIEW]Lucie Mercier - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (7-8):355-360.
    The Dictionary of Untranslables: A Philosophical Lexicon, a translation of Vocabulaire européen des philosophies, is an invaluable resource for researchers in philosophy and the humanities more generally. Gathering together the work of over 150 philosophers, this encyclopaedic project focuses on a series of philosophical terms that prove difficult to translate, disclosing their historical and linguistic intricacies. This review aims to provide a succinct analysis of its structure and rationale. It is suggested that a gap exists between the framing of the (...)
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