Julia Kristeva explicates her foundational distinction between the semiotic and the symbolic and explores their interrelationships. Linking the psychosomatic to the literary and the literary to a larger political horizon, she questions the premises of linguistic, psychoanalytic, philosophical, and literary theories.
Julia Kristeva explicates her foundational distinction between the semiotic and the symbolic and explores their interrelationships. Linking the psychosomatic to the literary and the literary to a larger political horizon, she questions the premises of linguistic, psychoanalytic, philosophical, and literary theories.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
European Perspectives: A Series in Social Thought and Cultural Criticism
Julia Kristeva. Translated by Margaret Waller. Introduction by Leon S. Roudiez.
Inhaltsangabe
Translator's Preface Introduction, by Leon S. Roudiez Prolegomenon Part I. The Semiotic and the symbolic 1. The Phenomenological Subject of Enunciation 2. The Semiotic Chora Ordering the Drives 3. Husserl's Hyletic Meaning: A Natural Thesis 4. Hjelmslev's Presupposed Meaning 5. The Thetic: Rupture and/or Boundary 6. The Mirror and Castration Positing the Subject as Absent from the Signifier 7. Frege's Notion of Signification: Enunciation and Denotation 8. Breaching the Thetic: Mimesis 9. The Unstable Symbolic. Substitutions in the Symbolic: Fetishism 10. The Signifying Process 11. Poetry That is Not a Form of Murder 12. Genotext and Phenotext 13. Four Signifying Practices Part II. Negativity: Rejection 14. The Fourth "Term" of the Dialectic 15. Independent and Subjugated "Force" in Hegel 16. Negativity as Transversal to Thetic Judgment 17. "Kinesis," "Cura," "Desire" 18. Humanitarian Desire 19. Non-Contradiction Neutral Peace 20. Freud's Notion of Expulsion Rejection Part III. Heterogeneity 21. The Dichotomy and Heteronomy of Drives 22. Facilitation, Stasis, and the Thetic Moment 23. The Homological Economy of the Representamen 24. Through the Principle of Language 25. Skepticism and Nihilism in Hegel and in the Text Part IV. Practice 26. Experience Is Not Practice 27. The Atomistic Subject of Practice in Marxism 28. Calling Back Rupture within Practice: Experience-in-Practice 29. The Text as Practice, Distinct from Transference Discourse 30. The Second Overturning of the Dialectic after Political Economy, Aesthetics 31. Madoror and Poems, Laughter as Practice 32. The Expenditure of a Logical Conclusion: Igitur Notes Index
Translator's Preface Introduction, by Leon S. Roudiez Prolegomenon Part I. The Semiotic and the symbolic 1. The Phenomenological Subject of Enunciation 2. The Semiotic Chora Ordering the Drives 3. Husserl's Hyletic Meaning: A Natural Thesis 4. Hjelmslev's Presupposed Meaning 5. The Thetic: Rupture and/or Boundary 6. The Mirror and Castration Positing the Subject as Absent from the Signifier 7. Frege's Notion of Signification: Enunciation and Denotation 8. Breaching the Thetic: Mimesis 9. The Unstable Symbolic. Substitutions in the Symbolic: Fetishism 10. The Signifying Process 11. Poetry That is Not a Form of Murder 12. Genotext and Phenotext 13. Four Signifying Practices Part II. Negativity: Rejection 14. The Fourth "Term" of the Dialectic 15. Independent and Subjugated "Force" in Hegel 16. Negativity as Transversal to Thetic Judgment 17. "Kinesis," "Cura," "Desire" 18. Humanitarian Desire 19. Non-Contradiction Neutral Peace 20. Freud's Notion of Expulsion Rejection Part III. Heterogeneity 21. The Dichotomy and Heteronomy of Drives 22. Facilitation, Stasis, and the Thetic Moment 23. The Homological Economy of the Representamen 24. Through the Principle of Language 25. Skepticism and Nihilism in Hegel and in the Text Part IV. Practice 26. Experience Is Not Practice 27. The Atomistic Subject of Practice in Marxism 28. Calling Back Rupture within Practice: Experience-in-Practice 29. The Text as Practice, Distinct from Transference Discourse 30. The Second Overturning of the Dialectic after Political Economy, Aesthetics 31. Madoror and Poems, Laughter as Practice 32. The Expenditure of a Logical Conclusion: Igitur Notes Index
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