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Canned Laughter

Philosophy and Rhetoric 47 (4):434-454 (2014)

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  1. The Sexual Contract.Carole Pateman - 1988 - Ethics 100 (3):658-669.
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  • [Book review] the racial contract. [REVIEW]Charles W. Mills - 1997 - Social Theory and Practice 25 (1):155-160.
    White supremacy is the unnamed political system that has made the modern world what it is today. You will not find this term in introductory, or even advanced, texts in political theory. A standard undergraduate philosophy course will start off with plato and Aristotle, perhaps say something about Augustine, Aquinas, and Machiavelli, move on to Hobbes, Locke, Mill, and Marx, and then wind up with Rawls and Nozick. It will introduce you to notions of aristocracy, democracy, absolutism, liberalism, representative government, (...)
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  • The Politics of Friendship.Jacques Derrida - 1988 - Journal of Philosophy 85 (11):632-644.
    Recorded in Ithaca, NY by Cornell University., Sponsored by: Andrew D. White Professors-At-Large Program., Speaker: Professor of the History of Philosophy, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, Andrew D. White Professor-at-Large., Lecture, October 3, 1988.
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  • The Laugh of the Medusa.Hélène Cixous - 1976 - Signs 1 (4):875-893.
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  • Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression.Jacques Derrida & Eric Prenowitz - 1995 - Diacritics 25 (2):9.
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  • Noise... The Political Economy of Music.Dana Polan, Jacques Attali & Brian Massumi - 1988 - Substance 17 (3):56.
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  • Addressing alterity: Rhetoric, hermeneutics, and the nonappropriative relation.Diane D. Davis - 2005 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 38 (3):191-212.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Addressing Alterity:Rhetoric, Hermeneutics, and the Nonappropriative RelationDiane DavisTeaching is not reducible to maieutics; it comes from the exterior and brings me more than I contain.—Emmanuel Levinas, Totality and InfinityThere is always the matter of a surplus that comes from an elsewhere and that can no more be assimilated by me, than it can domesticate itself in me. A teaching that may part ways with Heidegger's motif of our being (...)
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  • Counter-Statement.[author unknown] - 1953 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 28 (3):469-470.
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  • The Call of Things: A Critique of Object-Oriented Ontologies.Andrew Cole - 2013 - The Minnesota Review 2013 (80):106-118.
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  • Tonality and Ethos.Matthew M. Heard - 2013 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 46 (1):44-64.
    In her essay examining how rhetoric attends to an “explicitly nonhermeneutic, ethical dimension” of the relationship between self and other, Diane Davis argues that the act of attunement is vital to the rhetorical challenge of “keep[ing] hermeneutic interpretation from absorbing the strictly rhetorical gesture of the [other’s] approach, which interrupts the movement of appropriation and busts any illusion of having understood” (2005, 208, original hers). This comment is part of a larger conversation about ethical action in the face of radical (...)
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  • Here Comes Everything: The Promise of Object-Oriented Ontology.Timothy Morton - 2011 - Qui Parle 19 (2):163-190.
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