Rather, it is in these two forms— the relation to other and the relation to self— that a single unending confrontation agitates history; it can be read in the ruptures that topple systems, and in the modes of coherence that tend to repress internal... Classical Traditions and Modern Meanings - Page 282edited by - 1996 - 532 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Michel de Certeau - Literary Criticism - 1986 - 304 pages
..."anxiety" that intertwines the continuity of history and the discontinuity of its systems: difference. It is in fact difference which carves the isolating...obscure workings, or in staving off its fatal venom. Outside Thought Those who cling to continuity think they can escape death by taking refuge in the fiction... | |
| Barry Smart - Philosophy - 1994 - 430 pages
..."anxiety" that intertwines the continuity of history and the discontinuity of its systems: difference. It is in fact difference which carves the isolating...obscure workings, or in staving off its fatal venom. Outside Thought Those who cling to continuity think they can escape death by taking refuge in the fiction... | |
| Geoffrey Batchen - Photography - 1999 - 294 pages
...cycles and the ambiguity of their connections do not constitute tvo problems. Rather, it is in these Ivo forms — the relation to other and the relation to...workings, or in staving off its fatal venom. De Certeau, "The Black Sun of Language: Foucault," Heterologies, 181. Foucault replicates the paradoxical play... | |
| Terry Threadgold - Aboriginal Australians - 1997 - 233 pages
...into the homogeneity of language and which, conversely, opens in each system the paths to another. There is both continuity and discontinuity, and both...each epistemological age, with its own 'mode of being in order', carries within itself an alterity every representation attempts to absorb by objectifying... | |
| Terry Threadgold - Aboriginal Australians - 1997 - 233 pages
...discontinuity, and both are deceptive, because each epistemological age, with its own 'mode of being in order', carries within itself an alterity every representation attempts to absorb by objectifying . . . Alterity always reappears, and in a fundamental way, in the very nature of language. A truth... | |
| Lars Allolio-Näcke, Britta Kalscheuer, Arne Manzeschke - Cross-cultural studies - 2005 - 476 pages
...discontinuity, and both are deceptive, because each epistemological age, with its own >mode of being in order<, carries within itself an alterity every representation attempts to absorb by objectifying« (DeCerteau 1986: 181). 8 Die Doktrin ist im eigentlichen Sinne keine Entität, wie eine Institution,... | |
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