Results for 'deterritorialization'

103 found
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  1.  33
    The Deterritorialization of Human Rights.Virgil Ciomos - 2010 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 9 (25):17-27.
    The jurisdiction of Human Rights finds itself in a paradoxical situation for, on the one hand, these rights are affirmed as universal and, on the other, they emerged from within the boundaries of certain determinate states. That is why Western modernity is marked by a tension between the primary, determined territory proper to the emergence of human right and their universal, world calling. With regard to this tension the present study focuses on several key issues in our times: the (...) of human rights and their progressive personalization; the redefinition of public space as the very interiorization of this deterritorialization; the “export” of certain national interests through manu military deterritorialization of the human rights but also of terrorism which, as the author of the present study argues, is actually the universalization of both terrorism and of its reverse – the creation of military bases “outside” any national jurisdiction. (shrink)
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  2.  4
    Absolute Deterritorialization, Aporia and the Open System: The Spiral in Deleuze, Axelos, Heraclitus.Joff P. N. Bradley & Gerald Argenton - 2025 - Global Philosophy 35 (1):1-18.
    Throughout, the paper examines the concept of the unexpected. Heraclitus, Kostas Axelos, and Bernard Stiegler are invoked to decipher the impossible-possibility encapsulated in Heraclitus’ Fragment 18. The term ‘unhoped-for’ signifies the ‘un-passable’ or ‘un-traversable,’ akin to an insurmountable enigma. Aporia, or a difficult-to-resolve impasse, is associated with this sense. The unexpected challenges all expectations, revealing the hidden truth within aporia. The ‘methodology’ to transcend the aporon echoes Heidegger’s pursuit as Being tends toward self-concealment. This exploration urges us to consider the (...)
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  3.  55
    Deterritorializations: Putting postmodernism to work on teacher education and inclusion.Julie Allan - 2004 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 36 (4):417–432.
  4. Deterritorializing democratic legitimacy.Melissa S. Williams - 2024 - In Archon Fung & Sean W. D. Gray, Empowering affected interests: democratic inclusion in a globalized world. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
  5.  82
    Deterritorializing "Deterritorialization": From the "Anti-Oedipus" to "A Thousand Plateaus".Eugene W. Holland - 1991 - Substance 20 (3):55.
  6.  37
    Deterritorializing Programming Systems: For a Nomadology of Forth.Theodore M. Norton - 1998 - Symploke 6 (1):109-117.
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  7.  32
    Avivakṣitavācya-dhvani and the Deterritorialization of Signifier: A Liberating Experience for Language, Author and Reader.V. S. Sreenath - 2017 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 45 (5):817-836.
    This paper aims to make an anti-canonical reading of the avivakṣitavācya-variety of dhvani conceptualized by the ninth century Sanskrit literary critic Ānandavardhana in his seminal work Dhvanyāloka. In this paper, I argue that avivakṣitavācya-dhvani opens up a signifier to new significations that are not conventionally associated with it through a process of deterritorialization. In any language, convention functions as a structuring mechanism upon a signifier by clearly demarcating a rigid semantic ambit for it. By the term ‘conventional semantic ambit’, (...)
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  8.  31
    Anti-Oedipus in the Anthropocene: Education and the deterritorializing machine.David R. Cole - 2024 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 56 (3):285-297.
    The Deleuze/Guattari text Anti-Oedipus burst onto the intellectual scene in 1972 as a radical new means to reconceptualise capitalism and its effects. At the heart of Anti-Oedipus and its analysis of capitalism is the concept of deterritorialization, and how it evacuates identities, culture, values, and, indeed, coherent thought itself, and it makes them susceptible to the equations and dynamics of capital flows. Anti-Oedipus presents the mechanisms with respect to how deterritorialization interacts with and to an extent liberates desire (...)
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  9.  49
    Migrant Acts: Deterritorializing Postcoloniality.Sankaran Krishna - 2009 - Theory and Event 12 (4).
  10.  72
    Underwater Self-determination: Sea-level Rise and Deterritorialized Small Island States.Jörgen Ödalen - 2014 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 17 (2):225-237.
    Global climate change is likely to become a major cause of future migration. Small Island States are particularly vulnerable since territorial destruction caused by sea level rise poses a threat to their entire existence. This raises important issues concerning state sovereignty and self-determination. Is it possible for a state to remain self-determining even if it lacks a stable population residing on a specific territory? It has been suggested that migrants from disappearing Small Island States could continue to exercise sovereign control (...)
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  11.  22
    Staying alive: rethinking deterritorialization in a post‐feminist era.Anna Lundberg - 2015 - Nursing Philosophy 16 (3):133-140.
    In recent years, the concept ‘post‐feminism’ and its links to neoliberal economic structures and to the extreme reinforcement of individualization as raison d'etre of Western civilization have been discussed at length by numerous distinguished scholars in feminist cultural studies and feminist philosophy. This article takes its point of departure in this discussion. Drawing on Wendy Brown, Elizabeth Grosz, Angela McRobbie, Wendy Larner, and others, the text is examining the discourse of post‐feminism and neoliberalism, and its effects on overarching political scenarios, (...)
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  12.  10
    Dispersed Constituency Democracy: Deterritorializing Representation to Reduce Ethnic Conflict.David Ciepley - 2013 - Politics and Society 41 (1):135-162.
    In multiethnic and multi-religious democracies, the chronic danger is that candidates will engage in “identity politics,” appealing to one locally preponderant ethnic group against other groups. The usual formulas for composing multiethnic democracies—ethnic federalism and/or proportional representation—often exacerbate the problem, ethnicizing political campaigns and carving up the national legislature into ethnic blocs, each beholden only to its own group. An alternative approach—what I call “dispersed constituency democracy”—is to match each legislative seat with a constituency that reflects the overall ethnic composition (...)
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  13.  30
    No Mad Art: The Deterritorialized Déparleur in the work of Edouard Glissant.J. Michael Dash - 2001 - Paragraph 24 (3):105-116.
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  14.  50
    Territories of Knowledge: The Deterritorialization and Reterritorialization of the Social Sciences.Mark J. Smith - 2005 - International Studies in Philosophy 37 (2):159-180.
  15. Tradition is (not) modern : Deterritorializing globalization.Jane M. Jacobs - 2004 - In Nezar AlSayyad, The end of tradition? New York: Routledge.
     
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  16.  37
    Dancing on a Tightrope: Globalization, Deterritorialization, and Standardization in Multicultural Environment.Medha Bakhshi - 2024 - Philosophy of Management 23 (2):197-210.
    The article introduces a new perspective on the impact of globalization on identity formation, which marks a shift from traditional understandings of fixed territorial (cultural) identities. It uses Deleuze and Guattari’s theoretical terms of Deterritorialization and Reterritorialization and establishes these as the essence of Globalization Scholte (Globalization: A Critical Introduction, Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2005), rejecting the pessimism and fear of cultural imperialism as a by-product of globalization or a fear of standardization in multicultural work environments. It presents globalization (...)
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  17.  18
    Attention and Decreation as Deterritorializing Practices: Toward a Weilian Minor Politics.Sophie Bourgault - 2021 - In Casey Ford, Suzanne McCullagh & Karen Houle, Minor ethics: Deleuzian variations. Chicago: McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 202-223.
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  18.  21
    The Concealment of Violence in the History of Fencing: Semantics, Codification, and Deterritorialization.Elise Defrasne Ait-Said - 2018 - Philosophical Journal of Conflict and Violence 2 (2).
    Depending on historical periods and individual perspectives, fencing has been defined in various ways. Indeed, fencing has been regarded as an art, and/or a science, and/or a sport, and/or a game. This paper shows that those various attempts to define fencing throughout history are strategies aiming to conceal the founding violence of fencing (although these strategies do not prevent the emergence of further forms of violence). The study demonstrates that these strategies pertain to semantics, to regulation and codification of fencing, (...)
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  19.  9
    Cross-Cultural and Linguistic Dynamics in the Deterritorialization of Legal Concepts Through International Commercial Contracts.Roman Uliasz - forthcoming - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique:1-23.
    The purpose of this article is to examine the process of deterritorialization of legal concepts embedded in international commercial contracts. Typically written in English, these contracts often incorporate concepts derived from common law jurisdictions, given that English is the language of expression for the common law tradition. This underscores the intrinsic interconnection between language and underlying legal concepts. While parties involved in contract drafting may sometimes mitigate this connection by using terms and clauses that do not immediately evoke common (...)
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  20.  54
    The Wild in my Art: Territorialization, Deterritorialization, Reterritorialization.Kevin Jones - 2008 - In Jones Kevin, [no title].
    Exhibition catalogue for the exhibition of drawings and paintings held as part of the Wilderness and Inner Space conference at the University of Kent, Canterbury 2008. The concept of Territorialization from Deleuze and Guattari is linked to ideas of wilderness to both describe the psychotherapeutic relationship and to critique the proposed state regulation of the psychotherapies. The transference and counter transference relation between client and psychotherapist is described as a process of territorialization and deterritorialization in which a dream of (...)
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  21. Introduction and Cultural Sites: Sustaining a Home in a Deterritorialized World.Olwig Karen Fog - 1997 - In Karen Fog Olwig & Kirsten Hastrup, Siting culture: the shifting anthropological object. New York: Routledge.
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  22.  64
    Nice-looking obstacles: parkour as urban practice of deterritorialization[REVIEW]Christoph Brunner - 2011 - AI and Society 26 (2):143-152.
    Most academic publications refer to Parkour as a subversive and embodied tactic that challenges hegemonic discourses of discipline and control. Architecture becomes the playful ground where new ways to move take form. These approaches rarely address the material and embodied relations that occur in these practices and remain on the discursive plane of cultural signifiers. A theory of movement between bodies as the founding aspect of Parkour unfolds alternative concepts of body, space, time and movement beyond the discursive. Movement becomes (...)
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  23. Cultural sites: sustaining a home in a deterritorialized world.Karen Fog Olwig - 1997 - In Karen Fog Olwig & Kirsten Hastrup, Siting culture: the shifting anthropological object. New York: Routledge.
     
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  24.  28
    I Like Hong Kong... Art and Deterritorialization.Frank Vigneron - 2010 - Columbia University Press.
    Frank Vigneron, an advocate of all things local, boldly calls for the cultivation of an environmental consciousness that encourages the development of local cultures. Vigneron draws on comparative aesthetics and the work of several contemporary philosophers and sociologists to make sense of recent movements among the arts community of Hong Kong. He also traces threads of communication between different cultures within Hong Kong's former arts establishment.
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  25.  45
    Becoming post-hysteric: Chris kraus’s deterritorializing of French post-structuralism.Lauren Fournier - 2021 - Angelaki 26 (6):86-110.
    This article considers American writer and filmmaker Chris Kraus’s genre-bending, parodic book I Love Dick as a way to deconstruct divisions that persist between the female “hysteric” and th...
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  26.  40
    Poststructuralism and the construction of subjectivities in forensic mental health: Opportunities for resistance.Jim A. Johansson & Dave Holmes - 2024 - Nursing Philosophy 25 (1):e12440.
    Nurses working in correctional and forensic mental health settings face unique challenges in the provision of care to patients within custodial settings. The subjectivities of both patients and nurses are subject to the power relations, discourses and abjection encountered within these practice milieus. Using a poststructuralist approach using the work of Foucault, Kristeva, and Deleuze and Guattari, this paper explores how both patient and nurse subjectivities are produced within the carceral logic of this apparatus of capture. Recognizing that subjectivities are (...)
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  27.  27
    Liquid Modernity and Cultural Analysis.Griselda Pollock - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (1):111-116.
    This extended introductory article sets the scene for consideration of liquid modernity and Bauman’s recent work in general. His ideas are placed against Pollock’s concept of the ‘trans-disciplinary’. The ramifications of Bauman’s work for cultural analysis are discussed, particularly his ideas about migration, tourism, borders and the impact of global social trends on citizenship and agency. One central theme is deterritorialization - both in terms of academic disciplines and the shift from solid, defined, localized, territorialized, nation-bound modernity to the (...)
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  28.  17
    Діалектика глокалізації в епоху пізнього модерну.О. Ю Кийков - 2017 - Гуманітарний Вісник Запорізької Державної Інженерної Академії 69:11-16.
    This article explores modern interpretations of the phenomenon of glocalization that is based on the idea of the multidimensional, more just and decentralized world. Globalization as a specific model of cultural dynamics is formed on the basis of network forms of social self-organization and electronic forms of communication. It is noted that to date there have been four models describing the correlation between global and local, universal and particular in the culture of "late" modernity. The first is unification's model of (...)
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  29. Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day: Adeleuzian Reading of Pynchon’s Language.Ali Salami & Razieh Rahmani - 2018 - Anafora 5 (5).
    his study explores Pynchon’s mammoth novel, Against the Day, in terms of the minor practice of language as proposed by Deleuze and Guattari in their book Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature, which opens up new possibilities for literary criticism. With his idiosyncratic, intensive, and inventive practice of language, Pynchon shatters the already existing notions of appropriate and homogenizing forms of major language. The novel demystifies the language’s institutionalized system of signification and defies identifiable decipherable meaning in many ways, such as (...)
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  30. Individuals for Anti-Individualists.John Sutton - 2023 - Constructivist Foundations 18 (3):374-376.
    Open peer commentary on the article “Beyond Individual-Centred 4E Cognition: Systems Biology and Sympoiesis” by Mads Julian Dengsø & Michael David Kirchhoff. Abstract: Dengsø and Kirchhoff offer a revised dynamic conception of the individual in place of the bounded cognitive agent of classical cognitive science. However, this may not be sufficiently robust to ground the enquiries into individual and cultural differences that remain vital in the proposed “deterritorialized cognitive science.” It also needs to make contact with rich traditions of 4E (...)
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  31.  20
    The Ontological Consequences of Copernicus.Neil Turnbull - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (1):125-139.
    This article argues that contemporary space exploration, in producing visual representations of the planetary Earth for terrestrial consumption, has engendered a shift in the way the Earth - as terra firma - is both experienced and conceived. The article goes on to suggest that this shift is a key, but still largely tacit presupposition, underlying contemporary discourses on globalization and cultural cosmopolitanization. However, a close reading of some of the texts that make up the canon of 20th-century European philosophy shows (...)
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  32.  45
    Philosophy of Accelerationism: A New Way of Comprehending the Present Social Reality (in Nick Land’s Context).Denis I. Chistyakov - 2022 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 26 (3):687-696.
    Modern types of social reality require updated ways of comprehending them. The research is devoted to a new analytical form of understanding modernity that has recently emerged - accelerationism, still rarely discussed in Russian philosophy. The representatives of accelerationism call for a radical and rapid acceleration of socio-economic and technological processes in capitalist societies. The article reflects some ideas of the Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics by Alex Williams and Nick Srnicek, after which the accelerationist trend in philosophy and social (...)
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  33.  50
    Love's Old Song Will Be New: Deleuze, Busby Berkeley and Becoming-Music.Steven Pustay - 2015 - Film-Philosophy 19 (1):172-189.
    This article argues that Busby Berkeley’s unique musical spectacles invert the cinematic taxonomy found in Deleuze’s twin volumes on Cinema through the process of ‘becoming-music.’ By taking up a form that I term ‘visual-music,’ in which musical properties are incorporated within the image, Berkeley’s work problematizes Deleuze’s philosophy of cinematic sound and benefits instead from the conceptions of the musical refrain and rhythm located in Deleuze and Guattari’s A Thousand Plateaus. Breaking away from traditional Deleuzian readings of cinema, I demonstrate, (...)
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  34.  26
    Deleuze and world cinemas.David Martin-Jones - 2011 - New York: Continuum.
    Introduction : deterritorializing Deleuze -- Spectacle I : attraction-image -- History : Deleuze after dictatorship -- Space : geopolitics and the action-image -- Spectacle II : Masala-image -- Conclusion : the continuing adventures of Deleuze and world cinemas.
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  35.  32
    Equaliberty: Political Essays.Étienne Balibar - 2014 - Duke University Press.
    First published in French in 2010, _Equaliberty_ brings together essays by Étienne Balibar, one of the preeminent political theorists of our time. The book is organized around _equaliberty_, a term coined by Balibar to connote the tension between the two ideals of modern democracy: equality and liberty. He finds the tension between these different kinds of rights to be ingrained in the constitution of the modern nation-state and the contemporary welfare state. At the same time, he seeks to keep rights (...)
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  36.  71
    Dialogues Ii.Gilles Deleuze & Claire Parnet - 1987 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Claire Parnet & Gilles Deleuze.
    French journalist Claire Parnet's famous dialogues with Gilles Deleuze offer an intimate portrait of the philosopher's life and thought. Conversational in tone, their engaging discussions delve deeply into Deleuze's philosophical background and development, the major concepts that shaped his work, and the essence of some of his famous relationships, especially his long collaboration with the philosopher Félix Guattari. Deleuze reconsiders Spinoza, empiricism, and the stoics alongside literature, psychoanalysis, and politics. He returns to the notions of minor literature, deterritorialization, the (...)
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  37.  60
    Conceptions of the self in early childhood: Territorializing identities.Liselott Borgnon - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):264–274.
    This article draws upon the Deleuzian/Guattarian idea of territorializing movements to trouble the notion of the identity of the learning pre‐school child, produced by developmental psychology, as an individual, natural and developing child as well as the more recent image of the child characterised by autonomy and flexible behaviour. Accordingly, a child's apprenticeship of walking is associated here with the movements of a surfer. This association disturbs the orthodox thought of recognition and representation that makes us define, include and exclude (...)
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  38.  27
    La Emancipación de Un Cuerpo Sin Órganos Puesta a Prueba: 31ª Bienal de São Paulo.Rosa María Droguett Abarca - 2017 - Trans/Form/Ação 40 (1):127-150.
    Resumen: El presente artículo propone que la 31ª Bienal de Sao Paulo entraña un afán emancipador para los "sin tierra" - errantes, migrantes y viajeros. Para ello se conforma como un cuerpo sin órganos, que despliega estrategias liberadoras promoviendo: desarticulación, experimentación, vagabundeo y tránsito de sujetos y pueblos. Esta Bienal, en tanto CsO, mueve intensidades como flujos sensibles por los intersticios de los proyectos artísticos dispuestos en organismo. Acá el CsO es un conjunto de prácticas reservadas a desterritorializar los estratos (...)
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  39. Critical Displacements: On the Socio-Political Potential of ‘Wearable’ Structures.Edith Lázar & Sabin Borș - 2017 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:65-85.
    In this article, we discuss the potential of wearable structures to provide effective social commentaries and address the political representation of refugees, migrants, and nomads. We take Lucy Orta’s Refuge Wear as an occasion to address a series of socio-political considerations around wearables, textiles, communication, and technology, as well as the role of urban and social environments in determining architectures of mobility. Finally, we provide a critique of framing concepts such as relational aesthetics, heterotopias, nomadology, or deterritorialization—to propose a (...)
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  40.  17
    Empire and Counter-Empire in the Italian Far Right.Damian Spruce - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (5):99-126.
    What old Fascisms and new nationalisms circulate in the political spaces of Europe? Through an analysis of their split on immigration policy in 2003, this article examines the myths and ideologies of the two major far right parties in Italy, the Lega Nord and the Alleanza Nazionale. It argues that the anti-imperial mythology of the Lega, based on the defence of Lombardy against the Holy Roman Empire, has led it into a modernist politics of territoriality, borders and homogeneity. On the (...)
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  41. The Maritime Modernity of Hamlet.Yi Wu - 2018 - Coriolis: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies 8 (1):33-49.
    This essay investigates the rôle of the North Atlantic as a silent actant in the dramatic economy of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. It takes the series of actions of Hamlet’s deportation by sea, his nocturnal transformation on board and his surprise return with the pirate ship as the axis around which the play turns. It examines the movement of deterritorialization and mimesis in the constitution of sovereignty by the ceaseless transference of piracy and inter-imperial rivalries and passages. Interpreting Hamlet as being (...)
     
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  42.  93
    The End of the 1951 Refugee Convention? Dilemmas of Sovereignty, Territoriality, and Human Rights.Seyla Benhabib - 2020 - Jus Cogens 2 (1):75-100.
    The 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol are the main legal documents governing the movement of refugee and asylum seekers across international borders. As the number of displaced persons seeking refuge has reached unprecedented numbers, states have resorted to measures to circumvent their obligations under the Convention. These range from bilateral agreements condemning refugees to their vessels at sea to the excision of certain territories from national jurisdiction. While socio-economic developments and the rise of the worldwide web have led (...)
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  43.  22
    The Deleuze Dictionary.Adrian Parr (ed.) - 2005 - Cambridge University Press.
    This dictionary, the first dedicated to the work of Gilles Deleuze, offers an in-depth and lucid introduction to one of the most influential figures in continental philosophy. It defines and contextualizes more than 150 terms relating to Deleuze's philosophy, including "becoming," "body without organs," "deterritorialization," "difference," "repetition," and "rhizome." The entries also explore Deleuze's intellectual influences and the ways in which his ideas have shaped philosophy, feminism, cinema studies, postcolonial theory, geography, and cultural studies. More than just defining and (...)
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  44.  44
    Escaping the Network.Anna Longo - 2020 - Open Philosophy 3 (1):175-186.
    We are today agents of a peculiar reality, the global network or the system for automated information production. Our condition in the global network is that of agents of the real, since we all contribute to the coproduction of this ever-evolving process. Nevertheless, I will argue, this reality is but the effect of the adoption of a notion of instrumental pragmatic rationality which denies the existence of any other possible reality as the actualization of different determinations of Reason. While following (...)
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  45.  23
    The nomadic subject as a cinematographic hero by Alain Resnais.Evgenii Kirillovich Seleznev - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The author of the work raises the issue of the phenomenon of nomadism in the context of the work of the French director Alain Resnais. The object of the research is the early works of the director, such films as "Last year in Marienbad", "Hiroshima, my love", "I love you, I love". The purpose of the work is to answer the question of how nomadic strategies allow the author to create non-linear narrative structures, oscillating characters and flickering characters in his (...)
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  46.  26
    Territoriality and the Democratic Paradox: the Hemispheric Social Alliance and Its Alternatives for the Americas.Marc G. Doucet - 2005 - Contemporary Political Theory 4 (3):275-295.
    The civil society opposition to economic globalization, at times referred to as the ‘anti-globalization movement’, is often seen as unleashing new democratic energies. Some suggest that part of what we are witnessing is some form of deterritorialization of the democratic experience. What is often missing from this claim, however, is a more thorough evaluation of the images of democracy drawn by the movement itself. The first section of this paper will draw from various readings of the democratic experience in (...)
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  47.  13
    What’s wrong with globalization?: Contra ‘flow speak’ - towards an existential turn in the theory of globalization.Jörg Dürrschmidt & Heinz Bude - 2010 - European Journal of Social Theory 13 (4):481-500.
    The article attempts a reformulation of globalization theory. We identify ‘flow speak’ and the flattened ontology of the social that goes with it as a major limitation in contemporary globalization theory. Contrary to the prevailing overemphasis on mobility and deterritorialization, we suggest an existential turn that orients future globalization thinking more towards issues of belonging, choice and commitment, and the rhythmicity of social relations. To highlight the processual character of this shift of perspective, we shall draw on the paradigmatic (...)
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  48.  13
    “A Different Sort of Map Altogether”: Reading Hugo Hamilton's Migrant Geographies in Hand in the Fire.Audrey Robitaillié - 2019 - Environment, Space, Place 11 (1):85-101.
    Abstract:This study analyses how the migrant experience is reflected in the geography of Hugo Hamilton's work of fiction entitled Hand in the Fire (2010). The novel is told from the point of view of Vid, a Serbian immigrant who is trying to settle in Ireland. The young carpenter endeavours to fit in Irish society through his friendship with a young Dublin lawyer, Kevin Concannon, who tells him that a true friend would put his “hand in the fire” for you. Through (...)
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  49.  3
    Black screens, white frames: Gilles Deleuze and the filmmaking machine.Tanya Shilina-Conte - 2024 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter delineates the theory of the black or white screen as a force of deterritorialization in minor, or modern political cinema. In the previous chapter I relied on the molar and the molecular for the description of deterritorializations in corporeal and cerebral modern cinema, but here I shift emphasis to the major and the minor. These latter concepts help us to better understand the connection between thought, body, and social milieu. Various impossibilities in the social field create conditions (...)
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    Mutations in Citizenship.Aihwa Ong - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):499-505.
    Mutations in citizenship are crystallized in an ever-shifting landscape shaped by the flows of markets, technologies, and populations. We are moving beyond the citizenship-versus-statelessness model. First, the elements of citizenship (rights, entitlements, etc.) are becoming disarticulated from each other, and becoming re-articulated with universalizing criteria of neoliberalism and human rights. Such ‘global assemblages’ define zones of political entitlements and claims. Second, the space of the ‘assemblage’, rather than the national terrain, becomes the site for political mobilizations by diverse groups in (...)
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