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  1.  26
    Modernism and nihilism.Shane Weller - 2010 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    At the heart of some of the most influential strands of philosophical, political, and aesthetic modernism lies the conviction that modernity is fundamentally nihilistic. This book offers a wide-ranging critical history of the concept of nihilism from its origins in French Revolutionary discourse to its place in recent theorizations of the postmodern. Key moments in that history include the concept's appropriation by political activists in mid-nineteenth-century Russia, by Nietzsche in the 1880s, by the European avant-garde and 'high' modernists in the (...)
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  2.  14
    Beckett, Literature and the Ethics of Alterity.Shane Weller - 2006 - Palgrave-Macmillan.
    If there is one trait common to almost all post-Holocaust theories of literature, it is arguably the notion that the literary event constitutes the affirmation of an alterity that resists all dialectical mastery and makes possible a post-metaphysical ethics. Beckett's oeuvre in particular has repeatedly been deployed as exemplary of just such an affirmation. In Beckett, Literature and the Ethics of Alterity , however, Weller argues through an analysis of the interrelated topics of translation, comedy, and gender that to read (...)
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  3.  56
    The word folly: Samuel Beckett's "comment dire" ("what is the word").Shane Weller - 2000 - Angelaki 5 (1):165-180.
  4.  33
    In other words: on the ethics of translation.Shane Weller - 2005 - Angelaki 10 (3):171 – 187.
    Is it ever ethical to translate? In other words – But already, as though it refused to await any decision concerning its relation to the ethical, translation of a kind is taking place here. For one...
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  5.  16
    Literature, philosophy, nihilism: the uncanniest of guests.Shane Weller - 2008 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Absolute devaluation : Friedrich Nietzsche -- Homelessness : Martin Heidegger -- Fatal positivities : Theodor Adorno -- The naive calculation of the negative : Maurice Blanchot -- Bad violence : Jacques Derrida -- The fracture : Giorgio Agamben -- Distortions, or, Nihilism against itself : Gianni Vattimo -- The denial of (Greek) thought : Alain Badiou.
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  6.  56
    Nothing to be said.Shane Weller - 2003 - Angelaki 8 (1):91 – 108.
    One of the most significant ways in which much late-nineteenth- and early twentieth-century literature and philosophy may be distinguished from their predecessors is in their reliance upon the notion of ‘inexpressibility’ and the limits of the sayable. In this article, I seek not only to chart the history of this tradition, but also to reflect critically upon the use it makes of the concept of ‘the nothing’. For all their differences, in both Wittgenstein and Heidegger one encounters deployments of this (...)
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  7. Rather than nothing' : Derrida, literature, and the resistance of Nihilism.Shane Weller - 2007 - In Simon Morgan Wortham & Allison Weiner (eds.), Encountering Derrida: legacies and futures of deconstruction. New York: Continuum.