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  1.  21
    The Language that Can Bear Thinking: An Interview with Grant Farred.Grant Farred & Nicolette Bragg - 2022 - Diacritics 50 (2):52-63.
    Abstract:Nicolette Bragg asks Grant Farred about the legacy of his text Martin Heidegger Saved My Life and what it means to think.
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  2.  17
    ‘Beside myself’: touch, maternity and the question of embodiment.Nicolette Bragg - 2020 - Feminist Theory 21 (2):141-155.
    This article uses the surprising bodily effects of a period following birth to unsettle the reproductive narrative that circumscribes the maternal relation. Drawing on scholarship on skin and touch within philosophy and feminist and queer theory, ‘Beside myself’ demonstrates how an intensely intimate relationship can throw into relief modes of embodiment that trouble the temporality and space presumed of reproduction. Doing so, it calls attention to the limits of materialist discourses of embodiment. With reference to Gayle Salamon’s Assuming a Body, (...)
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  3.  13
    Introduction: The Responsibility of Awkwardness.Nicolette Bragg - 2016 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 24 (1):1-8.
    The thought of the limit has in its genetics the questioning of time and place. The essays in this collection, African Thinking and/at Its Limits, demonstrate this essential interrogation ; their address of the limits of African thinking is inevitably also one that presents us with the limitedness of temporal and spatial understandings. For the limit signals the very reach of time and place, and enables the possibility of territory, control, management, and measure – possibilities that can seem at once (...)
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  4. Jacques Derrida : figure of maternal thought.Nicolette Bragg - 2019 - In Grant Farred (ed.), Derrida and Africa: Jacques Derrida as a Figure for African Thought. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books.
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