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  1. Legal Subjectivity and the ‘Right to be Forgotten’: A Rancièrean Analysis of Google.Susanna Lindroos-Hovinheimo - 2016 - Law and Critique 27 (3):289-301.
    This article discusses the right to be forgotten. The landmark Google ruling of the European Court of Justice gave this ambiguous right new weight and raised several urgent questions. This article considers what kind of person is presupposed and constructed when somebody invokes their right to be forgotten. The aim is to engage in an experimental reading of the ruling in the framework of contemporary political theory, namely, the philosophy of Jacques Rancière. The analysis shows that even though the right (...)
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  • (1 other version)Some thoughts on the "(Extra)ordinary" : on philosophy, coloniality and being other-wise.Nayar Jayan - 2017 - Alternatives : Global, Local, Political 42 (1):3-25.
    In this essay, I question the philosophical appropriation of the “street”; much recent critical theory fixes on the “events” of the street as portending ruptural becomings—into being—of the new in the world. I argue that such readings of the “extraordinary” are founded upon a heroic ontologic–epistemology of “abandonment–resurrection” that defines colonial–modern Eurocentric philosophy. Against this preoccupation with the extraordinary, I present a view that reads in the events of the street the ordinariness of the perceived extraordinary and the extraordinariness of (...)
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