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  1. Operationalizing heterogeneity in poststructuralist discourse theory: the heterogeneous logics of international trade politics.Thomas Jacobs - 2021 - Critical Discourse Studies 18 (6):602-618.
    ABSTRACT Ever since an intense theoretical debate over a decade ago, the concept of heterogeneity has had a well-established place within poststructuralist Discourse Theory. It captures the interactions between the heart of the space of representation and its margins, between excluded excess and manifest presence; and conceptualizes particularities, differential remainders, and discursive exteriority. The analytical implications of heterogeneity remain underexploited, however. This contribution makes the case that one way to operationalize the notion of heterogeneity in empirical research is by tracing (...)
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  • Identidad y Antagonismo En El Pensamiento de Ernesto Laclau.Hugo E. Herrera - 2024 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 65 (157):e-42660.
    ABSTRACT In the present work, we will determine the fundamental aspects of Laclau’s thought by considering the central role that the subject and the other have in it, both in the individual and in the collective or political sphere. Although the difference is a condition for unfolding consciousness, we will show that Laclau’s conception of the subject presents certain insufficiencies. They become especially relevant when addressing the political sphere. It is pertinent to warn, as Laclau does, regarding the limits of (...)
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  • Sport in the Novels of James Joyce: A Discourse Theoretical Approach.Andy Harvey - 2021 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 16 (4):443-460.
    Among the many themes in which the Irish modernist novelist, James Joyce, was intellectually and emotionally engaged, the issue of British imperialism and Irish nationalism was paramount. While Joyce despised the English colonial occupation of his country, he was equally dismissive of a mythical Irish nationalism, particularly in the way it was endorsed by the Gaelic Athletic Association. While Joyce is not renowned as a writer of sport; nevertheless, sporting pursuits can be found throughout his novels. Joyce’s nuanced understanding of (...)
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