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Oxford Literary Review 3 (2):6-21 (1978)

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  1. Mind-Body-Technology: ‘Nosce te Ipsum’ and a Theory of Prosthetic ‘Trialism’.Tom Slevin - 2018 - In Petrine Vinje (ed.), Anthology - Anatomical Theatre. Utten Tittel. pp. 26-41.
    This chapter will discuss a profound and fundamental interrelationship between mind, body and technology in terms of what it means to be ‘human’, or, what ‘being’ human might mean. One historical, yet enduring, theory of the human subject is René Descartes’s philosophy of the mind distinct from the body – this is termed ‘Cartesian dualism’. Whilst this is a classical, if outmoded, model of conceiving of a philosophy of the subject, it also provides a useful conceptual framework through which to (...)
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  • “The Catastrophe of My Existence”: facing death in roger de la fresnaye's self-portraiture.Tom Slevin - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (1):181 - 198.
    This article considers the relationship between subjectivity and representational form. More specifically, it discusses the transformation in self-representation between life and death by the artist Roger de la Fresnaye, reflecting his modernist articulations of life to pre-modern, classicist figurations of death. For the artist, modernity could not bear the demands that dying made upon representation, as unable to fully accord death a sign. Modernity's dissolution of the subject annihilated the very permanence of identity and presence that death guaranteed, but without (...)
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  • Unknow Thyself: Apophaticism, Deconstruction, and Theology after Ontotheology.Mary-Jane Rubenstein - 2003 - Modern Theology 19 (3):387-417.
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