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  1. Introduction: International Relations as Political Theory.Andreas Bieler & Adam David Morton - 2005 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 8 (4):383-393.
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  • Physical Order vs. Divine Designer: Celestial Mechanics and Natural Theology Struggling for the System of the World.Massimiliano Badino - manuscript
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  • Land use planning, supermarkets and reciprocated ideologies: the construction and mediation of articulated discourses 1979-1999.Michael T. Casselden - 2001 - Dissertation, Loughborough University
    A Doctoral Thesis. Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of Doctor of Philosophy of Loughborough University.
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  • Language, Agency and Hegemony: A Gramscian Response to Post‐Marxism.Peter Ives - 2005 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 8 (4):455-468.
    Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe have attempted to save the concept of ?hegemony? from its economistic and essentialist Marxist roots by incorporating the linguistic influences of post?structuralist theory. Their major Marxist detractors criticise their trajectory as a ?descent into discourse? ? a decay from well?grounded, material reality into the idealistic and problematic realm of language and discourse. Both sides of the debate seem to agree on one thing: the line from Marxism to post?Marxism is the line from the economy to (...)
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  • Academics and practitioners: nurses as intellectuals.Colin A. Holmes - 2002 - Nursing Inquiry 9 (2):73-83.
    Academics and practitioners: nurses as intellectualsIn the author's experience, nurse educators working in universities generally accept that they are ‘academics’, but dismiss suggestions that they are ‘intellectuals’ because they see it as a pretentious description referring to a small number of academics and aesthetes who inhabit a conceptual world beyond the imaginative capacity of most other people. This paper suggests that the concept of the ‘intellectual’, if not the word itself, be admitted into nursing discourse through the adoption of a (...)
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  • Poder y revolución: claves para asimilar a Foucault.Jorge Luis Acanda González - 2001 - Recerca.Revista de Pensament I Anàlisi 1 (1):69-93.
    This paper takes up Foucault's theoretical legacy and looks for the hermeneutical keys which will enable its critical appropriation by the present day revolutionary left. It also aims to developping an idea previously set out by N. Poulantzas: not only are Foucault's thesis compatible with marxism, they can only be fully understood fiom it.
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  • Spectres of new media technologies: the hope for democracy in the postcolonial public sphere.Ma Diosa Labiste - unknown
    This study is an intervention in postcolonial theorising through a critique of technologies of representation. It examines the effects of technologically-mediated representation in a postcolonial condition that the Philippines has exemplified. New media technologies are mechanisms of representations that embody the logic of spectrality presented in Jacques Derrida’s later work. Spectrality, which brings doubts, ephemerality, and instability to dominant discourses and modes of representation, provides a chance for change.Spectres are effects of technologically-mediated representation that articulate the infinite demand for justice (...)
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  • Editorial: Antonio Gramsci and Educational Thought.Peter Mayo - 2009 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 41 (6):601-604.
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