Results for 'Peg E. Birmingham'

936 found
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  1.  64
    Logos and the place of the other.Peg E. Birmingham - 1990 - Research in Phenomenology 20 (1):34-54.
  2. Reading Experimentally. Review of "The Language of Difference" by Charles E. Scott. [REVIEW]Peg Birmingham - 1988 - Research in Phenomenology 18 (1):283.
     
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  3.  25
    Rethinking Authenticity, Anarchy, and Collective Action: An Interview with Peg Birmingham.Peg Birmingham & Ian Alexander Moore - 2022 - Diacritics 50 (2):38-51.
    Abstract:Ian Moore speaks with Peg Birmingham about the intellectual and personal relationship between Martin Heidegger and Hannah Arendt, and more.
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  4.  19
    Deception, Violence and Law: Renewing the Political.Peg Birmingham - 2015 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    Leading philosopher Peg Birmingham explores the relation between political deception, violence, and law in an attempt to renew the concept of the political.
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  5.  20
    Editors' Note.Peg Birmingham & Ian Alexander Moore - 2022 - Philosophy Today 66 (4):829-830.
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  6. Hannah arendti.Peg Birmingham - 2010 - In Alan D. Schrift, The History of Continental Philosophy. London: Routledge. pp. 4--133.
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  7. Arendt and Hobbes: Glory, Sacrificial Violence, and the Political Imagination.Peg Birmingham - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (1):1-22.
    The dominant narrative today of modern political power, inspired by Foucault, is one that traces the move from the spectacle of the scaffold to the disciplining of bodies whereby the modern political subject, animated by a fundamental fear and the will to live, is promised security in exchange for obedience and productivity. In this essay, I call into question this narrative, arguing that that the modern political imagination, rooted in Hobbes, is animated not by fear but instead by the desire (...)
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  8.  26
    Editorial Note.Peg Birmingham & Ian Alexander Moore - 2015 - Philosophy Today 59 (4):711-711.
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  9.  14
    Introduction.Peg Birmingham - 2018 - Philosophy Today 62 (1):1-1.
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  10. On Violence, Politics, and the Law.Peg Birmingham - 2010 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 24 (1):1-20.
    If each age has its particular point of entry to the central political problems of authority, power, and obligation, then the present age has its point of access in the relation among violence, politics, and the law. Ours is an age that has largely replaced its theological underpinnings with political revolutions, while at the same time it has grown skeptical of natural right and natural law claims. If the political order is no longer founded in the theological and is unable (...)
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  11.  29
    Destiny.Peg Birmingham, Gregory Fried, Laurence Hemming, Julia A. Ireland & Elliot R. Wolfson - 2020 - Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual 10:192-221.
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  12.  19
    Editors' Introduction.Peg Birmingham, Ian Alexander Moore & Vilde Aavitsland - 2017 - Philosophy Today 61 (4):815-816.
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  13.  73
    Hannah Arendt and Human Rights: The Predicament of Common Responsibility.Peg Birmingham - 2006 - Indiana University Press.
    Hannah Arendt’s most important contribution to political thought may be her well-known and often-cited notion of the "right to have rights." In this incisive and wide-ranging book, Peg Birmingham explores the theoretical and social foundations of Arendt’s philosophy on human rights. Devoting special consideration to questions and issues surrounding Arendt’s ideas of common humanity, human responsibility, and natality, Birmingham formulates a more complex view of how these basic concepts support Arendt’s theory of human rights. Birmingham considers Arendt’s (...)
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  14. The An-Archic Event of Natality and the "Right to Have Rights".Peg Birmingham - 2007 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 73:763-776.
    My claim is that Arendt founds the 'right to have rights' in the anarchic event of natality. Arendt is very explicit that the event of natality is an ontological event. In The Human Condition, she writes: "The miracle that saves the world, the realm of human affairs, from its normal "natural" ruin is ultimately the fact of natality, in which the faculty of action is ontologically rooted." At the same time, she is equally insistent that this ontological event is not (...)
     
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  15. Holes of Oblivion: The Banality of Radical Evil.Peg Birmingham - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):80-103.
    This essay offers a reflection on Arendt's notion of radical evil, arguing that her later understanding of the banality of evil is already at work in her earlier reflections on the nature of radical evil as banal, and furthermore, that Arendt's understanding of the “banality of radical evil” has its source in the very event that offers a possible remedy to it, namely, the event of natality. Kristeva's recent work on Arendt is important to this proposal insofar as her notion (...)
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  16.  22
    Hannah Arendt and Political Glory: Earthly Immortality and a Post-Theological Concept of the Political.Peg Birmingham - 2015 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    Leading philosopher Peg Birmingham explores the relation between political deception, violence, and law in an attempt to renew the concept of the political.
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  17.  34
    Philosophy in a Time of Pandemic.Peg Birmingham & Ian Alexander Moore - 2020 - Philosophy Today 64 (4):813-813.
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  18.  79
    Superfluity and Precarity.Peg Birmingham - 2018 - Philosophy Today 62 (2):319-335.
    In this essay I take up Butler’s and Arendt’s respective accounts of the production of precarity and superfluity, asking whether they are proximate accounts, as they seem to be, or whether Butler’s turn to precarity misses the radical nature of Arendt’s genealogy of the production of superfluity, a genealogy that begins at the inauguration of modernity, attempts to find a “perfect superfluousness” in the death camps, and continues unabated in the contemporary global world. Reading Arendt against Butler, I argue that (...)
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  19.  11
    Political Affections.Peg Birmingham - 2012 - In Tina Chanter & Ewa PŁonowska Ziarek, Revolt, Affect, Collectivity: The Unstable Boundaries of Kristeva’s Polis. SUNY Press. pp. 127-145.
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  20.  56
    An Incarnation Openly Bearing Its Emptiness.Peg Birmingham - 2010 - Philosophy Today 54 (Supplement):26-30.
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  21.  49
    Editors’ Introduction.Peg Birmingham & Steven Crowell - 2005 - Philosophy Today 49 (Supplement):3-12.
  22.  29
    Europe, Universality, Philosophy: A Monstrous Promise?Peg Birmingham - 2011 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 3 (1).
  23.  94
    The pleasure of your company: Arendt, Kristeva, and an ethics of public happiness.Peg Birmingham - 2003 - Research in Phenomenology 33 (1):53-74.
    In this essay, I examine Arendt's and Kristeva's account of the archaic event of natality, arguing that each attempts to show how this event is the source of our pleasure in the company of others. I first examine Arendt's understanding of natality, showing that in her early writings, specifically in The Origin of Totalitarianism, the event of natality carries with it a capacity for violence that Arendt does not continue to develop in her later formulations. This lack of development leaves (...)
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  24.  28
    Edges Give Way: “Being on Edge and Falling Apart”.Peg Birmingham - 2022 - Research in Phenomenology 52 (2):273-280.
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  25. Agamben on Violence, Language, and Human Rights.Peg Birmingham - 2011 - In Nathan Eckstrand & Christopher Yates, Philosophy and the return of violence: studies from this widening gyre. London: Continuum International Publishing Group.
  26. Hannah Arendt's dismissal of the ethical.Peg Birmingham - 1995 - In Philippe van Haute & Peg Birmingham, Dissensus communis: between ethics and politics. Kampen: Kok Pharos.
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  27. Brill Online Books and Journals.Peg Birmingham - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (1).
     
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  28.  92
    Feminist fictions: Discourse, desire and the law.Peg Birmingham - 1996 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 22 (4):81-93.
  29.  7
    Heidegger and Arendt.Peg Birmingham - 2002 - In Fran?ois Raffoul & David Pettigrew, Heidegger and Practical Philosophy. State University of New York Press. pp. 191-202.
  30.  12
    Note from the Editors.Peg Birmingham & Ian Alexander Moore - 2016 - Philosophy Today 60 (2):427-427.
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  31.  27
    Review Articles.Peg Birmingham - 2010 - Research in Phenomenology 40 (1):132-140.
  32.  41
    Subjectivity and Representation in Descartes: The Origins of Modernity.Peg Birmingham & Dalia Judovitz - 1991 - Substance 20 (1):131.
  33.  63
    The subject of praxis.Peg Birmingham - 1999 - Research in Phenomenology 29 (1):215-226.
  34.  9
    The aporia of rights: explorations in citizenship in the era of human rights.Anna Yeatman & Peg Birmingham (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    The Aporia of Rights is an exploration of the perplexities of human rights, and their inevitable and important intersection with the idea of citizenship. Written by political theorists and philosophers, essays canvass the complexities involved in any consideration of rights at this time. Yeatman and Birmingham show through this collection of works a space fora vital engagement with the politics of human rights.
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  35.  35
    Editors’ Introduction.Peg Birmingham & Lenard Lawlor - 2009 - Philosophy Today 53 (Supplement):3-4.
  36.  64
    The time of the political.Peg Birmingham - 1991 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 14 (2/1):25-45.
  37.  65
    Elated citizenry: Deception and the democratic task of bearing witness.Peg Birmingham - 2008 - Research in Phenomenology 38 (2):198-215.
    It has become nearly a truism for contemporary theorists of democracy to understand the democratic space as agonistic and contested. The shadow that haunts thinkers of democracy today, and out of which this assumption emerges, is the specter of totalitarianism with its claims to a totalizing knowledge in the form of ideology and a totalizing power of a sovereign will that claims to be the embodiment of the law. Caught up in these totalizing claims, the citizenry becomes elated. The only (...)
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  38.  13
    Adriana Cavarero and Hannah Arendt.Peg Birmingham - 2021 - In Silvia Benso & Antonio Calcagno, _Open Borders: Encounters Between Italian Philosophy and Continental Thought_, eds. Silvia Benso and Antonio Calcagno. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. pp. 301-321.
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  39. Heidegger and Arendt: The lawful space of worldly appearance.Peg Birmingham - 2013 - In Francois Raffoul & Eric S. Nelson, The Bloomsbury Companion to Heidegger. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 157.
     
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  40.  12
    A lying world order : political deception and the threat of totalitarianism.Peg Birmingham - 2010 - In Roger Berkowitz, Thinking in Dark Times: Hannah Arendt on Ethics and Politics. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 71-78.
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  41.  66
    Building from ruins: The wandering space of the feminine.Peg Birmingham - 1992 - Research in Phenomenology 22 (1):73-79.
  42.  36
    Dennis Schmidt and the Origin of the Ethical Life.Peg Birmingham - 2017 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (1):53-66.
    This essay explores Dennis Schmidt’s notion of an “original ethics,” asking how language, freedom and history are at work in this original ethics. The essay first examines Schmidt’s claim that philosophy has traditionally understood ethical and political life as rooted in a subject ruled entirely by what he calls “the law of the common.” The essay specifically looks at how Plato and Hobbes embrace the law of the common, expelling thereby the law of the idiom from their respective ethical and (...)
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  43. Hannah Arendt : The spectator's vision.Peg Birmingham - 1999 - In Joke Johannetta Hermsen & Dana Richard Villa, The judge and the spectator: Hannah Arendt's political philosophy. Leuven, Belgium: Peeters.
  44.  48
    Natal Finitude: Syncopated Temporality and the Endurance of the New.Peg Birmingham - 2013 - Research in Phenomenology 43 (1):141-148.
  45.  12
    12 On Deception.Peg Birmingham - 2008 - In Shannon Sullivan & Dennis J. Schmidt, Difficulties of ethical life. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 195-212.
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  46.  36
    Refiguring Continental Philosophy.Peg Birmingham & James Risser - 2007 - Philosophy Today 51 (Supplement):3-7.
  47.  86
    The Subject of Rights.Peg Birmingham - 2011 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 16 (1):139-156.
    It is often pointed out that Agamben’s most profound disagreement with Hannah Arendt is his rejection of anything like a “right to have rights” that would guarantee the belonging to a political space. I want to suggest, however, that the subject of rights in Agamben’s thought is more complicated, arguing in this essay that Agamben’s critique is not with the concept of human rights per se, but with the declaration of modern rights. In other words, this essay will explore how (...)
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  48.  49
    Worldly Immortality in an Age of Superfluity: Arendt’s The Human Condition.Peg Birmingham - 2018 - Arendt Studies 2:25-35.
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  49.  12
    With Profound Gratitude to David Pellauer.Peg Birmingham - 2014 - Philosophy Today 58 (1):5-5.
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  50.  53
    Ambrosio, Franci J. Dante and Derrida Face to Face. Albany: SUNY Press, 2007. $75.00 Baggett, David and William A. Drrumin, eds. Hitchock and Philosophy: Dail M for Metaphysics. Chicago: Open Court, 2007. $17.95 pb. Bird, Colin. An Introduction to Political Philosophy. Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007. $24.99 pb. [REVIEW]Peg Birmingham, James Campbell, Maria C. Cimitile, Elian P. Miller, Conal Condren, Stephen Gaukroger, Ian Hunter, John W. Cooper & M. I. Ada - forthcoming - Philosophy Today.
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