Published in English for the first time, Didier Eribon' s well-received and celebrated work on a philosophy of and examination of gay life.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Preface xi Acknowledgments xxiii Abbreviations xv Introduction: The Language of the Tribe 1 Part 1 A World of Insult 13 1 The Shock of Insult 15 2 The Flight to the City 18 3 Friendship as a Way of Life 24 4 Sexuality and Professions 29 5 Family and “Melancholy” 35 6 The City and Conservative Discourse 41 7 To Tell or Not to Tell 46 8 Heterosexual Interpellation 56 9 The Subjected “Soul” > 10 Caricature and Collective Insult 70 11 Inversions 79 12 On Sodomy > 13 Subjectivity and Private Life 97 14 Existence Precedes Essence 107 15 Unrealized Identity 113 16 Perturbations 124 17 The Individual and the Group 130 Part 2 Specters of Wilde 141 1 How “Arrogant Pederasts” Come Into Being 143 2 An Unspeakable Vice 153 3 A Nation of Artist 160 4 Philosopher and Lover 168 5 Moral Contamination 176 6 The Truth of Masks 182 7 The Greeks against the Psychiatrist 190 8 The Democracy of Comrades 197 9 Margot-a-la-boulangere and the Baronne-aux-epingles 206 10 From Momentary Pleasures to Social Reform 213 11 The Will to Disturb 223 12 The “Preoccupation With Homosexuality” 231 Part 3 Michel Foucault’s Heterotopias 245 1 Much More Beauty 247 2 From Night to the Light of Day 250 3 The Impulse to Escape 256 4 Homosexuality and Unreason 264 5 The Birth of Perversion 274 6 The Third Sex 281 7 Producing Subjects 289 8 Philosophy in the Closet 296 9 When Two Guys Hold Hands 303 10 Resistance and Counterdiscourse 310 11 Becoming Gay 319 12 Among Men 326 13 Making Differences 334 Addendum: Hannah Arendt and “Defamed Groups” 339 Notes 351 Works Cited 419 Index 439
Preface xi Acknowledgments xxiii Abbreviations xv Introduction: The Language of the Tribe 1 Part 1 A World of Insult 13 1 The Shock of Insult 15 2 The Flight to the City 18 3 Friendship as a Way of Life 24 4 Sexuality and Professions 29 5 Family and “Melancholy” 35 6 The City and Conservative Discourse 41 7 To Tell or Not to Tell 46 8 Heterosexual Interpellation 56 9 The Subjected “Soul” > 10 Caricature and Collective Insult 70 11 Inversions 79 12 On Sodomy > 13 Subjectivity and Private Life 97 14 Existence Precedes Essence 107 15 Unrealized Identity 113 16 Perturbations 124 17 The Individual and the Group 130 Part 2 Specters of Wilde 141 1 How “Arrogant Pederasts” Come Into Being 143 2 An Unspeakable Vice 153 3 A Nation of Artist 160 4 Philosopher and Lover 168 5 Moral Contamination 176 6 The Truth of Masks 182 7 The Greeks against the Psychiatrist 190 8 The Democracy of Comrades 197 9 Margot-a-la-boulangere and the Baronne-aux-epingles 206 10 From Momentary Pleasures to Social Reform 213 11 The Will to Disturb 223 12 The “Preoccupation With Homosexuality” 231 Part 3 Michel Foucault’s Heterotopias 245 1 Much More Beauty 247 2 From Night to the Light of Day 250 3 The Impulse to Escape 256 4 Homosexuality and Unreason 264 5 The Birth of Perversion 274 6 The Third Sex 281 7 Producing Subjects 289 8 Philosophy in the Closet 296 9 When Two Guys Hold Hands 303 10 Resistance and Counterdiscourse 310 11 Becoming Gay 319 12 Among Men 326 13 Making Differences 334 Addendum: Hannah Arendt and “Defamed Groups” 339 Notes 351 Works Cited 419 Index 439
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