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  1. Rethinking Sadomasochism: Feminism, Interpretation, and Simulation.Patrick D. Hopkins - 1994 - Hypatia 9 (1):116 - 141.
    In reexamining the "sex war" debates between radical feminists and lesbian feminist sadomasochists, I find that the actual practice of sadomasochism provides the basis for a philosophically more complex position than has been articulated. In response to the anti-SM radical perspective, I develop a distinction between simulation and replication of patriarchal dominant/submissive activities. In light of this important epistemological and ethical distinction, I claim that the radical feminist opposition to SM needs reassessment.
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  • (1 other version)Phenomenology in Lithuania.Arūnas Sverdiolas & Tomas Kačerauskas - 2009 - Studies in East European Thought 61 (1):31-41.
    The article deals with phenomenology in Lithuania. The main thesis of the article is this: phenomenology is a living tradition in need of both development and interpretation. The minor thesis follows from the main one: the Western phenomenological tradition and Lithuanian philosophy interact and develop in tandem with one another. According to the authors, the contact between poetics and philosophy is the dominant form of phenomenology in Lithuania. The phenomenological tradition is treated as creative and living philosophical thought.
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  • What has happened to desire? The BwO of the Hikikomori.Joff P. N. Bradley - 2024 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 56 (3):262-272.
    In this experimental piece of writing I want to think about the pedagogy of contact and the plight of the hikikomori or social recluse in Japan. I am interested in exploring how the hikikomori practices a kind of contactlessness or what I will call a deadly ipseity of desire. What does it mean to resist contact, to be without contact, to be without desire? What does it mean to risk contact, to risk being tactile with the other, to risk affirming (...)
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