Results for 'Claire Placial'

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  1.  19
    Pour la libre répétition du mot « et » dans la littérature de langue française.Claire Placial - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    Ce texte a déjà paru sur le site Langues de feu. Nous remercions Claire Placial de nous avoir autorisé à le reproduire ici. J'ai lu hier Le Sermon sur la chute de Rome, le roman de Jérôme Ferrari paru en 2012, qui a obtenu le dernier prix Goncourt. Bien des choses de ce livre m'ont plu : que ce soit en Corse, qu'il soit question d'ancêtres et de filiations, qu'il soit question d'enfants qui savent dès très tôt qu'ils (...)
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  2.  36
    Sur la traduction de l'Iliade par Jean-Louis Backès.Claire Placial - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    Ce texte a déjà paru le 23 août 2014 sur Langues de feu – les traducteurs et l'esprit des langues. Tours de Babel et glossolalies. Nous remercions Claire Placial de nous avoir autorisé à le reproduire ici. A paru au début 2013 une nouvelle traduction de l'Iliade par Jean-Louis Backès. Ce billet arrive, si dire se peut pour l'Iliade, après la bataille, et notamment après l'article de Jean-Yves Masson dans le Magazine littéraire, et la publication dans La République (...)
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  3.  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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  4. Deleuze and the Meaning of Life.Claire Colebrook - 2010 - Continuum.
    Introduction: The problem of vitalism : active/passive -- Brain, system, model : the affective turn -- Vitalism and theoria -- Inorganic art -- Inorganic vitalism -- The vital order after theory -- On becoming -- Living systems, extended minds, gaia -- Conclusion.
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  5.  91
    Understanding Deleuze.Claire Colebrook - 2002 - Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
    An accessible introduction to the contemporary thought of Deleuze. It makes concepts clear, showing their political and theoretical complexity, elaborating their social and artistic relevance. Australian author (previously at Monash University) now living in Edinburgh.
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  6.  46
    Where science starts: Spontaneous experiments in preschoolers’ exploratory play.Claire Cook, Noah D. Goodman & Laura E. Schulz - 2011 - Cognition 120 (3):341-349.
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  7.  80
    Deleuze: a guide for the perplexed.Claire Colebrook - 2006 - New York: Continuum.
    Cinema, thought and time -- Deleuze's cinema books -- Technology -- Essences -- Space and time -- Bergson, time, and life -- The movement-image -- The history of time and space and the history of cinema -- The movement-image and semiotics -- Styles of sign -- The whole of movement -- Image and life -- Becoming-inhuman, becoming imperceptible -- The deduction of the movement-image -- Art and time -- Destruction of the sensory motor apparatus and the spiritual automaton -- Time (...)
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  8.  56
    Integral humanism We are connected to the larger community, with a purpose in life. The impact of Jacques Maritain’s vision.Anne-Claire Motte - 2012 - The Chesterton Review 38 (3/4):634-637.
  9.  18
    Rethinking Identity and Metaphysics: On the Foundations of Analytic Philosophy.Claire Ortiz Hill - 1997 - Yale University Press.
    Two hundred years ago, J.M.W. Turner packed up two large leatherbound sketchbooks, pencils, and watercolors and set off for the north of England. When he returned from the tour that he regarded as one of the most important of his career, Turner had completed more than two hundred sketches - works that later became the basis of more than fifty major oil paintings and watercolors. For this illustrated book, David Hill has taken photographs of many of the actual sites Turner (...)
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  10.  7
    Comprehension and Competence: The Grasping Condition for Theoretical Understanding.Claire F. Dartez - forthcoming - Australasian Journal of Philosophy.
    Success conditions on theoretical understanding are notoriously difficult to pin down. Yet epistemologists broadly agree that there is a grasping condition on understanding and that this condition distinguishes understanding from propositional knowledge. Currently, representation manipulability is the most common expression of this condition. In this paper, I argue that representation manipulability is only a surface-level condition on the highest form of grasping. I propose that grasping a theory admits at least three levels: theory formation, theory comprehension, and theory competence. I (...)
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  11.  12
    Les frontières du profane dans l'antiquité tardive.Éric Rebillard & Claire Sotinel (eds.) - 2010 - Rome: École française de Rome.
    Papers presented to various conferences, 2003-2006.
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  12.  31
    Deconstructing COVID Time.Claire Colebrook - 2023 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 20 (4):675-683.
    This essay explores the problem of trust and truth in states of emergency. Drawing on Giorgio Agamben’s theory of biopolitics and his objections to political managerialism I argue that the real problem exposed by the pandemic was not a lack of trust in authority but an unscientific and uncritical attachment to expertise.
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  13.  61
    ‘A Grandiose Time of Coexistence’: Stratigraphy of the Anthropocene.Claire Colebrook - 2016 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 10 (4):440-454.
    Using Deleuze and Guattari's concept of stratigraphy, it is possible to open the question of the limits and range of the Anthropocene. Geological stratification has enabled a view of time and the earth that has opened new horizons, but this mode of stratification is one among others. Other stratifications are possible, not only those that would be compossible with the story of the Anthropocene, but also incompossible stratifications, at odds with the history of man.
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  14.  47
    The Play of the World: The End, the Great Outdoors, the Outside, Alterity and the Real.Claire Colebrook - 2016 - Derrida Today 9 (1):21-35.
    Both in his earliest debates with thinkers such as Foucault and Levinas, and in later critiques of political immediacy, Derrida invoked the inescapable burden of a necessary but impossible universalism. By raising the stakes so high it would seem that deconstruction generates hyperbolic conceptions of ethics and justice, but also precludes any form of day to day political positivity. In this essay I pursue the seemingly less ‘ethical’ conception of play in Derrida's work to argue for a multiple universalism.
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  15.  94
    Death and retribution.Claire Finkelstein - 2002 - Criminal Justice Ethics 21 (2):12-21.
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  16.  34
    Declining enrolment in a clinical trial and injurious misconceptions: is there a flipside to the therapeutic misconception?Claire Snowdon, Diana Elbourne & Jo Garcia - 2007 - Clinical Ethics 2 (4):193-200.
    The term 'therapeutic misconception' (TM) was introduced in 1982 to conceptualize how some psychiatry trial participants perceived and interpreted their involvement in research. TM has since been identified in many settings and is a major component in research ethics discussions. A qualitative study included a subgroup of interviews with five parents (two couples, one mother) who declined to enrol their baby in a neonatal trial. Analysis suggested the possibility of a counterpart to TM which, given the original terminology, we term (...)
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  17.  28
    Vagueza: a metáfora de frege e o paradoxo sorites.Linda Claire Burns - forthcoming - Critica.
  18.  25
    Explicit access to phonetic representations in 3-month-old infants.Karima Mersad, Claire Kabdebon & Ghislaine Dehaene-Lambertz - 2021 - Cognition 213 (C):104613.
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  19.  17
    1. On the Very Possibility of Queer Theory.Claire Colebrook - 2009 - In Chrysanthi Nigianni & Merl Storr, Deleuze and Queer Theory. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 11-23.
  20.  26
    Gender, power, and sexuality.Pamela Abbott & Claire Wallace (eds.) - 1991 - Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan.
    Gender, Power and Sexuality is a collection of original and exciting articles by well-known feminists which makes a major contribution to our understanding of the ways in which men exercise control over girls and women in their daily lives, in the home, at school, at work and in the courts. Women are seen to resent and challenge male power, but, the institutionalisation of male power is shown to mitigate against women taking control over their own lives.
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  21.  36
    Alain Corbin, L’harmonie des plaisirs. Les manières de jouir du siècle des Lumières à l’avènement de la sexologie.Anne-Claire Rebreyend - 2010 - Clio 31:307-309.
    Après l’odorat, la vue, l’ouïe, Alain Corbin, « historien du sensible », s’attache à un nouveau domaine d’étude relevant des sensibilités et de l’imaginaire, celui du plaisir des sens. Adoptant la démarche d’anthropologie historique qui lui est familière, il décrypte les différentes représentations (essentiellement masculines) de la jouissance au sein du couple hétérosexuel dans l’espace francophone de tradition catholique entre 1770 et les années 1860. Pour mener ce voyage dans le temps, il...
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  22.  20
    Correction to: Macleay’s Choice: Transacting the Natural History Trade in the Nineteenth Century.Simon Ville, Claire Wright & Jude Philp - 2020 - Journal of the History of Biology 53 (3):377-378.
    During the publication process of above mentioned article the Notes to Figures 1, 2, 3, and 4 were erroneously deleted from the figure legends. The correct versions are given below.
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  23.  13
    11 Extinguishing Ability: How We Became Postextinction Persons.Claire Colebrook - 2018 - In Matthias Fritsch, Philippe Lynes & David Wood, Eco-Deconstruction: Derrida and Environmental Philosophy. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 261-276.
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  24.  98
    Feminist Philosophy and the Philosophy of Feminism: Irigaray and the History of Western Metaphysics.Claire Colebrook - 1997 - Hypatia 12 (1):79 - 98.
    Irigaray demonstrates that metaphysics depends upon the specific negation and exclusion of the female body. Readings of Irigaray's Speculum of the Other Woman tend to highlight the status of this excluded materiality: is there an essential female body which precedes negation or is the feminine only an effect of exclusion? I approach Irigaray's work by way of another question: is it possible to move beyond a feminist critique of metaphysics and towards a feminist philosophy?
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  25.  14
    Pratiques de danse et discours de genre, une histoire connectée.Elizabeth Claire - 2017 - Clio 46:7-18.
    En 1797, un article du Journal des Luxus und der Moden fustige une nouvelle pratique de danse, « bacchanale » prisée par les habitantes de Breslau qui pivotent « comme une figure androgyne déformée » où les pieds « suppriment toute beauté » avec leur « enthousiasme ivre ». Quelques années plus tard, dans ses « Lettres d’un médecin », le rédacteur en chef de la Gazette de santé déplore une forme de lutte entre les sexes qui touche à l’« (...)
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  26. The art of the future.Claire Colebrook - 2012 - In Alexandre Lefebvre & Melanie White, Bergson, Politics, and Religion. Durham: Duke University Press.
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  27.  13
    What personality can teach us about mental health.Anya Plutynski & Claire Pouncey - forthcoming - Philosophical Psychology.
    While there have been forty years of active debate among philosophers of psychiatry about how to define mental disorder, there has been relatively little discussion of mental health. This is starting to change. A new literature is emerging about what it means to have mental health. While some define mental health as simply as the absence of mental disorder, others argue to the contrary that mental health is distinct from, and not reducible to, the presence or absence of mental illness. (...)
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  28.  43
    Extinction, Deterritorialisation and End Times: Peak Deleuze.Claire Colebrook - 2020 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (3):327-348.
    Have we reached what Alexander Galloway dismissively refers to as ‘peak Deleuze’? In this essay, I argue that the arrival at end times – with the sense of mass extinction and philosophy's exhaustion – is indeed a moment of ‘peak Deleuze’, but that this gesture of exhaustion is already implicit in A Thousand Plateaus. Recognising the limits and seduction of a text is never as easy as it seems; every attempt to break up with Deleuze and Guattari, though necessary, is (...)
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  29.  29
    Executive Functions and Impulsivity as Transdiagnostic Correlates of Psychopathology in Childhood: A Behavioral Genetic Analysis.Samantha M. Freis, Claire L. Morrison, Harry R. Smolker, Marie T. Banich, Roselinde H. Kaiser, John K. Hewitt & Naomi P. Friedman - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16:863235.
    Executive functions (EFs) and impulsivity are dimensions of self-regulation that are both related to psychopathology. However, self-report measures of impulsivity and laboratory EF tasks typically display small correlations, and existing research indicates that impulsivity and EFs may tap separate aspects of self-regulation that independently statistically predict psychopathology in adulthood. However, relationships between EFs, impulsivity, and psychopathology may be different in childhood compared to adulthood. Here, we examine whether these patterns hold in the baseline assessment of the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive (...)
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  30. Matter Without Bodies.Claire Colebrook - 2011 - Derrida Today 4 (1):1-20.
    Materialism is at once the most general of concepts, capable of gesturing to anything that seems either foundational or physicalist, and yet is also one of the most rhetorical of gestures: operating as a way of reducing, criticising or ‘‘exorcising’’ forms of idealism and ideology. Derrida's early, supposedly ‘‘textualist’’ works appear to endorse a materiality of the letter (including syntax, grammar, trace and writing) while the later works focus on matter as split between that which is posited and that which (...)
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  31.  57
    A cut in relationality.Claire Colebrook - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (3):175-195.
    One of the ways in which one might chart the force of various forms of posthuman thought is to mark a reversal in the ways we think about relationality. Rather than distinct Cartesian subje...
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  32.  41
    Civilian Starvation: A Just Tactic of War?Claire Thomas - 2005 - Journal of Military Ethics 4 (2):108-118.
    Abstract There is general agreement that the targeting of civilians in war is morally wrong. But sometimes starvation tactics are accepted as being a better option than direct military attacks. This article questions this view by arguing that starvation tactics affect civilians first and inflict long-term suffering. It argues that they are not just unless they can be limited to a small area where only military personnel will be affected. It looks at the provision for starvation tactics in the Geneva (...)
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  33.  15
    Constitutional Alchemy.Nomi Claire Lazar - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (2):168-172.
    In ‘The End of Law’, Bill Scheuerman illustrates the ways normativity, context and decision interlace, putting the lie to Carl Schmitt’s claim that decision is pure will. In doing so, Scheuerman gestures toward a truth about the alchemical nature of constitutions. Like decisions, I argue, constitutions are alchemical mechanisms for actualizing norms and normativizing facts. They accomplish this in part through mediating between dynamic (individual and political) selves before and after the moment of decision or coming-into-force. Schmitt’s error – or (...)
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  34.  49
    An Invitation to Scholarly Teaching - Some Annotations on the Scholarship of Teaching and (Especially) Learning for Philosophers.Helen Meskhidze, Claire A. Lockard & Stephen Bloch-Schulman - 2019 - American Association of Philosophy Teachers Studies in Pedagogy 5:169-199.
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  35.  4
    The Counter-Oceanic Sea.Claire Colebrook - 2025 - Angelaki 30 (1):26-39.
    When Freud described the “oceanic feeling” of intimated plenitude that haunted the boundaries of consciousness he both intensified a post-enlightenment aesthetics that imagined the beyond of civilization is female, fluid, and undifferentiated and gave modernist poetics a theory of an almost unthinkable serenity beyond the limits of identity. European Romanticism and modernism, for all their differences, operated largely with the assumption that being a subject required abandoning an original maternal plenitude. In The Deep, Rivers Solomon provides a counter-oedipal politics and (...)
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  36.  17
    Pour une approche phénoménologique de la maladie.Claire Crignon - 2024 - Archives de Philosophie 1:113-119.
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  37.  28
    Plant Sciences and the Public Good.Brian Wynne, Claire Waterton, Jane Taylor & Katrina Stengel - 2009 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 34 (3):289-312.
    Drawing on interviews and observational work with practicing U.K. plant scientists, this article uses Michel Callon's work as a tool to explore the issue of collaboration between academic science and business, in particular, calls by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council for a return to “public good” plant science. In an article titled “Is Science a Public Good?” Callon contributed to the debate about the commercialization of science by suggesting that commercialization and the public good need not be incompatible. (...)
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  38.  66
    Questioning Representation.Claire Colebrook - 2000 - Substance 29 (2):47-67.
  39.  20
    The Political is Personal – Or, Why have a Revolution (from within or without) When you can have Soma?Sasha Claire McInnes - 2001 - Feminist Review 68 (1):160-166.
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  40.  27
    Gender Differences in Body Evaluation: Do Men Show More Self-Serving Double Standards Than Women?Mona M. Voges, Claire-Marie Giabbiconi, Benjamin Schöne, Manuel Waldorf, Andrea S. Hartmann & Silja Vocks - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  41.  14
    Notes de lecture.Claire Crignon & Laurent Gallois - 2021 - Archives de Philosophie 84 (1):145-152.
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  42. Derrida, Deleuze and Haptic Aesthetics.Claire Colebrook - 2009 - Derrida Today 2 (1):22-43.
    In On Touching Derrida locates Jean-Luc Nancy (and, briefly, Gilles Deleuze) within a tradition of haptic ethics and aesthetics that runs from Aristotle to the present. In his early work on Husserl, Derrida had already claimed that phenomenology's commitment to the genesis of sense and the sensible is at one and the same time a commitment to pure and rigorous philosophy at the same time as it threatens to over-turn the primacy of conceptuality and cognition.Whereas Nancy (and those other figures (...)
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  43.  15
    Amelia Rauser, The Age of Undress. Art, Fashion, and the Classical Ideal in the 1790s.Elizabeth Claire - 2021 - Clio 54 (54):290-293.
    Le 11 mai 1793, Sir Gilbert Elliot écrit une lettre à sa femme dans laquelle il s’étonne d’une nouvelle mode qu’il a observée au bal offert par une amie. Lady Abercorn organise une soirée dansante « où se trouve une douzaine de femmes vêtues en statues, c’est-à-dire, avec la gaine placée juste en dessous des seins et une draperie de tissu qui tombe ». Sir Elliot précise que ces femmes « n’étaient pas tout à fait dénudées, mais l’effet était néanmoins (...)
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  44.  46
    Inappropriate regret.Claire Pouncey - 2009 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 16 (3):233-234.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Inappropriate RegretClaire Pouncey (bio)Keywordsanxiety, inappropriate guilt, moral sentiments, supererogation, regretThis delightful and provocative vignette has many interesting clinical facets, and I thank Dr. Bailey for his candid introspection. For me, this essay calls attention to an asymmetry in our culture, in which women tend to feel more comfortable than men in expressing anxieties about our unpredictable and often dangerous world. Women's fears, however, often are dismissed or minimized, revealing (...)
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  45.  15
    Virginie Valentin, L’art chorégraphique occidental, une fabrique du féminin. Essai d’anthropologie esthétique.Elizabeth Claire - 2014 - Clio 40:323-323.
    Dans son livre d’anthropologie esthétique sur L’art chorégraphique occidental, une fabrique du féminin, inspiré de sa thèse soutenue en 2005 à l’Université de Toulouse 2, Virginie Valentin propose d’étudier le « nœud entre émotion esthétique et danse classique » (p. 11) qui donnerait aujourd’hui aux jeunes filles françaises l’envie de pratiquer le ballet. Croisant entretiens de danseuses professionnelles et amatrices sur leurs expériences de l’apprentissage du ballet, avec une analyse littéra...
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  46. A Globe of One's Own: In Praise of the Flat Earth.Claire Colebrook - 2012 - Substance 41 (1):30-39.
  47.  33
    Climate machines, fascist drives and truth.Claire Colebrook - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (3):127-130.
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  48. Deleuze after Afro-pessimism.Claire Colebrook - 2022 - In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald, From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  49.  14
    Destroying cosmopolitanism for the sake of the cosmos.Claire Colebrook - 2012 - In Rosi Braidotti, Patrick Hanafin & Bolette Blaagaard, After cosmopolitanism. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, a Glasshouse book. pp. 166.
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  50. Dynamic potentiality: the body that stands alone.Claire Colebrook - 2010 - In Elena Tzelepis & Athena Athanasiou, Rewriting Difference: Luce Irigaray and ‘the Greeks’. State University of New York Press.
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