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  1. On Anthropological Knowledge.Dan Sperber - 1985 - Cambridge University Press.
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  • Stories of Sacrifice: From Wellhausen to Girard.John Milbank - 1995 - Theory, Culture and Society 12 (4):15-46.
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  • Seductions of the Impossible.Michael Richardson - 1998 - Theory, Culture and Society 15 (3-4):375-392.
    Theories about sacrifice generally focus on practice within ancient societies. In contrast, Georges Bataille sought the psychological truth that sacrifice embodies in the structure of contemporary society. This article considers Bataille's view of sacrifice against the background of the will of the surrealists to `reinvent love' and question traditional ideas of the relations between the sexes.
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  • Stories of sacrifice.John Milbank - 1996 - Modern Theology 12 (1):27-56.
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  • Introduction to Emile Durkheim's "Anti-Semitism and Social Crisis".Chad Alan Goldberg & Emile Durkheim - 2008 - Sociological Theory 26 (4):299 - 323.
    Emile Durkheim's "Antis?mitisme et crise sociale," written in 1899 during the Dreyfus Affair in France, is introduced. The introduction summarizes the principal contributions that "Antis?mitisme et crise sociale" makes to the sociology of anti-Semitism, relates those contributions to Durkheim's broader theoretical assumptions and concerns, situates his analysis of anti-Semitism in its social and historical context, contrasts it to other analyses of anti-Semitism (Marxist and Zionist) that were prominent in Durkheim's time, indicates some of the revisions and additions that a fuller (...)
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  • Heroism and history in Merleau-Ponty’s existential phenomenology.Bryan Smyth - 2010 - Continental Philosophy Review 43 (2):167-191.
    Whereas Phenomenology of Perception concludes with a puzzling turn to “heroism,” this article examines the short essay “Man, the Hero” as a source of insight into Merleau-Ponty’s thought in the early postwar period. In this essay, Merleau-Ponty presented a conception of heroism through which he expressed the attitude toward post-Hegelian philosophy of history that underwrote his efforts to reform Marxism along existential lines. Analyzing this conception of heroism by unpacking the implicit contrasts with Kojève, Aron, Caillois, and Bataille, I show (...)
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  • Toward a confucian ethic of the gift.Eric C. Mullis - 2008 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 7 (2):175-194.
    In this essay I discuss how the relational ethic characteristic of Classical Confucianism articulates an ethic of gift exchange. I first discuss the tradition that Confucius appropriated and show that the gift was utilized to form, maintain, and symbolize social relationships in Shang, Zhou, and Warring States China. I then go on to discuss the implications of this view by addressing two difficulties of gift exchange that are often discussed in the literature: the use of gifts to indebt or control (...)
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  • The International Criminal Court and Africa: Exemplary Justice.Edwin Bikundo - 2012 - Law and Critique 23 (1):21-41.
    This is a theoretical and empirical investigation into the causal link between international criminal trials and preventing violence through exemplary prosecutions. Specifically how do representative trials of persons accused of having the greatest responsibility for the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole, supposedly bind recurrent violence? The argument pursued is that by using an accused as an example, a court engages in an indirect and uncertain substitution of personal rights for social harmony and order. (...)
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  • Gender, Class and Ideology: The Social Function of Virgin Sacrifice in Euripides' Children of Herakles.Erik Gunderson, Sean Gurd & David Kawalko Roselli - 2007 - Classical Antiquity 26 (1):81-169.
    This paper explores how gender can operate as a disguise for class in an examination of the self-sacrifice of the Maiden in Euripides' Children of Herakles. In Part I, I discuss the role of human sacrifice in terms of its radical potential to transform society and the role of class struggle in Athens. In Part II, I argue that the representation of women was intimately connected with the social and political life of the polis. In a discussion of iconography, the (...)
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  • What Comes After Postcolonial Theory?Bhrigupati Singh - 2023 - Sophia 62 (3):577-606.
    This essay explores possible paths after postcolonial theory, with the after understood not as a negation, but as a form of inheritance and the creation of routes, such that an aftermath need not have a resentful or self-hating relation and nor simply an acceptance of given pictures of ‘western’ thought. The route explored here is neither fully secular nor religious, and nor from a radically alternative ontology, but rather prompted by three enduring concerns within the global humanities, explored in three (...)
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  • Masses on the stages of democracy: Democratic promises and dangers in self-dramatizations of masses.Christiane Mossin - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 167 (1):58-76.
    The political significance of masses is more obvious than ever. The aim of this article is to develop a conceptualization capable of capturing the dangerous as well as promising aspects of masses. It argues that, intricately, the dangers and fruitful potentials of masses are born out of the same fundamental structural features. We may differentiate analytically between different kinds of masses, but all masses contain elements of ambiguity. The mass conceptualization developed builds on a critical, deconstructing interpretation of selected Bataille (...)
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  • Temptation, Tradition, and Taboo: A Theory of Sacralization.Douglas A. Marshall - 2010 - Sociological Theory 28 (1):64-90.
    A theory of sacralization is offered in which the sacred emerges from the collision of temptation and tradition. It is proposed that when innate or acquired desires to behave in one way conflict with socially acquired and/or mediated drives to behave in another way, actors ascribe sacredness to the objects of their action as a means of reconciling the difference between their desired and actual behavior toward those objects. After establishing the sacred as a theoretical construct, the theory is sketched (...)
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  • Gender, Class and Ideology: The Social Function of Virgin Sacrifice in Euripides' Children of Herakles.David Kawalko Roselli - 2007 - Classical Antiquity 26 (1):81-169.
    This paper explores how gender can operate as a disguise for class in an examination of the self-sacrifice of the Maiden in Euripides' Children of Herakles. In Part I, I discuss the role of human sacrifice in terms of its radical potential to transform society and the role of class struggle in Athens. In Part II, I argue that the representation of women was intimately connected with the social and political life of the polis. In a discussion of iconography, the (...)
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  • Critical realism and economic anthropology.John Harvey, Andrew Smith & David Golightly - 2017 - Journal of Critical Realism 16 (5):431-450.
    This paper discusses basic critical realism within the context of economic anthropology and develops an approach to studying material relations between people. A diachronic form of analysis, following the work of Bhaskar and Archer, is described as a practical means of analysing property rights. This new approach emphasises epistemic relativism and ontological realism in order to compare disparate forms of human interaction across cultures. The aim of doing this is to develop a philosophical framework that allows for the comparison of (...)
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  • Television is Killing the Art of Symbolic Exchange.William Merrin - 1999 - Theory, Culture and Society 16 (3):119-140.
    The starting point for any understanding of Jean Baudrillard's media theory is his concept of `communication'. This is heavily indebted to his theory of symbolic exchange, drawn from the Durkheimian tradition running through Durkheim, Mauss, Caillois and Bataille. Common to all these authors is s specific view of human relations, derived from their anthropology, as involving both a communication and a confrontation. Baudrillard, therefore, sees the modern semiotic order as based on the destruction of these symbolic relations, and its media (...)
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  • The fascination with eros: The role of passionate interests under communism.Agnes Horvath - 2013 - History of the Human Sciences 26 (5):0952695113484319.
    Plato’s work offers insights into the corrosive impact of eros, insights central for contemporary politics. The article combines an in-depth reading of Plato with a case study, arguing for the relevance of communism. This is because love also establishes a relationship of subordination to the object of desire, which can subjugate and entrap the lover in his or her feelings. Such instrumentalization of eros in communism was promoted by adherents being supposed to love the sufferers. The obligation that to understand (...)
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  • Argumentation as an ethical and political choice.Menashe Schwed - unknown
    The paper's two theses are: First, that the historical and philosophical roots of argumentation are in ethics and politics, and not in any formal ideal, be it mathematical, scientific or other. Furthermore, argumentation is a human invention, deeply tied up with the emergence of democracy in ancient Greece. Second, that argumentation presupposes and advances concurrently humanistic values, especially the autonomy of the individual to think and decide in a free and uncoerced manner.
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  • Torture and democratic violence.Paul W. Kahn - 2009 - Ratio Juris 22 (2):244-259.
    Abstract. To understand the problem of torture in a democratic society, we have to take up a political-theological perspective. We must ask how violence creates political meaning. Torture is no more destructive and no more illiberal than other forms of political violence. The turn away from torture was not a turn away from violence, but a change in the locus of sacrifice: from scaffold to battlefield. Torture had been a ritual of mediation between sovereign and subject. Once sovereignty is located (...)
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  • Internal and external opposition to the bodhisattva's gift of his body.Reiko Ohnuma - 2000 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 28 (1):43-75.
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  • SacrificeRene Girard, translated by Matthew pattillo and David Dawson east Lansing mi. michigan state university press. 2011. 104 pp. $14.95. - Rene Girard and secular modernity: Christ, culture, and crisis Scott Cowdell notre dame in. notre dame university press. 2014. 259 pp. $34.00. [REVIEW]Eric D. Meyer - 2015 - Dialogue 54 (2):384-387.
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  • National Unity and Potlatch: Genealogical Observations Pertaining to North America’s Accursed Share.Jason Kemp Winfree - 2017 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 9 (3):218-229.
    This paper offers a genealogy of national unity in the United States approached through practices of consumption and punishment. Drawing on the work of Foucault, Mauss, and Bataille, the analysis shows how these practices are mutually determining, how they demonstrate an economy of excess as opposed to one of utility or conservation, and how they depend on and reinforce specific patterns of discursive and emotional coding. The Thanksgiving holiday serves as a privileged site for locating the elements of an apparatus (...)
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  • Between fieldwork and theory: World view and virtuosity in a monastic community.A. W. Sadler - 1976 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 3 (1):41-62.
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  • Death be not proud: Reevaluating the role of killing in sacrifice. [REVIEW]Kathryn McClymond - 2002 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 6 (3):221-242.
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  • Police and Public Funerals.Peter Manning - 2015 - Russian Sociological Review 14 (1):9-43.
    Durkheim and his followers alerted us to the role of collective representations such as funerals, processions and parades in pre-literate societies. These classic studies, elegant and detailed, have stood the test of time. Goffman has asked whether these events, along with memory and tradition, produce social solidarity in the twenty-first century. Perhaps social solidarity is enacted by such events, rather than reflecting norms, values, and beliefs. If so, how is this new kind of solidarity accomplished over the course of these (...)
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