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23. The Pharmacology of Poststructuralism: An Interview with Bernard Stiegler

In Benoît Dillet, Iain Mackenzie & Robert Porter (eds.), The Edinburgh Companion to Poststructuralism. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 489-506 (2013)

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  1. From resistance to invention in the politics of the impossible: Bernard Stiegler’s political reading of Maurice Blanchot.Ben Turner - 2019 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (1):43-64.
    In Bernard Stiegler’s Automatic Society Volume 1: The Future of Work, ‘the impossible’ and ‘the improbable’ appear as explicit parts of his political project. In his philosophy of technology, the impossible highlights the structural incompleteness that technics imparts to human existence. This article will trace how Stiegler draws on the work of Maurice Blanchot to produce this conjunction between technics and indetermination, and explore its political ramifications. This will show that rather than being a recent aspect of Stiegler’s work, the (...)
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  • Fugitive Philosophy.Dylan Vaughan - 2024 - Angelaki 29 (1):214-224.
    Abstract:The central inquiry of this article concerns the ethical orientation within post-structuralism, specifically questioning its potential affinity with deontology. While the “philosophers of difference” offer divergent perspectives on the doctrine of judgment, Jacques Derrida folds it within Deconstruction as a nomo-aporetic transcendental horizon. To understand this operation and its potential ethical significance, I suggest Jean-François Lyotard offers the best counter-model with which to compare against Derrida’s. Amongst their direct and indirect exchanges with each other is a dialogue concerning the law (...)
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