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Auteur Jean-Luc Nancy |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (14)
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Jean-Luc Nancy ; Robert D. Richardson, Traducteur ; Anne O'Byrne, Traducteur | California : Stanford University Press | Crossing aesthetics | 2000This book, by one of the most innovative and challenging contemporary thinkers, consists of an extensive essay from which the book takes its title and five shorter essays that are internally related to Being Singular Plural. One of the strongest[...]texte imprimé
Transcription d'une conférence, et des questions-réponses qui l'ont suivie, organisée en 2002 pour un public d'enfants au Centre dramatique national de Montreuil. J.-L. Nancy s'interroge sur l'existence de Dieu, les représentations que l'homme s[...]texte imprimé
In Doing, Jean-Luc Nancy, one of the most prominent and lucid articulators of contemporary French theory and philosophy, examines the precarious but urgent relationship between being and doing. His book is not so much a call to action as a summo[...]texte imprimé
Jean-Luc Nancy ; Simon Sparks | Stanford : Stanford University Press | Cultural Memory in the Present | 2002This book is a rich collection of philosophical essays radically interrogating key notions and preoccupations of the phenomenological tradition. While using Heidegger's Being and Time as its permanent point of reference and dispute, this collect[...]texte imprimé
At once an introduction to Hegel and a radically new vision of his thought, this remarkable work penetrates the entirety of the Hegelian field with brevity and precision, while compromising neither rigor nor depth. One of the most original inter[...]texte imprimé
Marc Blanchard ; Edouard Glissant ; Francis Marmande ; Jean-Christophe Bailly ; Jean-Luc Nancy ; Denis Hollier ; Jean Baptiste Pontalis ; Emmanuel Levinas ; Maurice Blanchot | New Haven : Yale University Press | Yale French studies | 1992Resume n`est pas disponibletexte imprimé
Recueil de textes publié à l'occasion de la session du Parlement des philosophes, consacrée à Jacques Derrida, à Strasbourg en juin 2004. Les auteurs évoquent les liens qui unissent le philosophe et la ville.texte imprimé
... Celui que le portrait invoque et révoque à la fois, lui qui riait, pleurait, parlait, ne disait rien, il fut toujours plus là qu'il n'y était, toujours plus présent que sa présence et plus pensant que sa pensée, plus ressemblant que sa sembl[...]texte imprimé
Jean-Luc Nancy, Auteur ; Brian Holmes, Traducteur | California : Stanford University Press | Crossing aesthetics | 1993texte imprimé
Jean-Luc Nancy, Auteur ; François Raffoul, Traducteur ; Gregory Recco, Traducteur | New Jersey : Humanities Press | 1997This is a meditation on the changing role of philosophy in a postmodernist context, the two essays gathered here Chr(45) 'The Forgetting of Philosophy' and 'The Weight of a Thought' - represent some of the themes that have recently occupied Nanc[...]texte imprimé
If anything marks the image, it is a deep ambivalence. Denounced as superficial, illusory, and groundless, images are at the same time attributed with exorbitant power and assigned a privileged relation to truth. Mistrusted by philosophy, forbid[...]texte imprimé
The book itself is a fortuitous happenstance; had a certain volume not caught Robertss eye during a wander break through the stacks on a library visit, the story of Lieutenant James Holman, known to his contemporaries as the Blind Traveler, migh[...]texte imprimé
Jean-Luc Nancy ; Celine Surprenant, Traducteur | Stanford : Stanford University Press | Cultural Memory in the Present | 2006As a model of close reading applied both to philosophical texts and the making of philosophical systems, Nancy's The Speculative Remark played a significant role in transforming the practice of philosophy away from system building to analysis of[...]texte imprimé
Jean-Luc Nancy ; Phillipe Lacoue-Labarthe ; François Raffoul, Traducteur | New York : State University of New York Press | 1992This book is a close reading of Jacques Lacan’s seminal essay, “The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason Since Freud, ” selected for the particular light it casts on Lacan’s complex relation to linguistics, psychoanalysis, and philo[...]