Corinne Painter, Christian Lotz - 2007 - Preview - More editions
Consider Levinas and his dog, for example. In “The Name of a Dog, or Natural Rights,” Levinas recounts his encounter with Bobby, a “wandering dog” who appeared in the prison camp and who Levinas characterizes as “the last Kantian in ...
Discussing Levinas's concept of the ethical appeal of the 'face' of the other and respect for absolute alterity as the grounds ... In his essay 'The Name of a Dog, or Natural Rights' Levinas describes his experience in a slave-labour camp and the ...
Gary D. Mole - 1997 - Preview
Levinas, Blanchot, Jabes, and the Shoah Levinas In his brief autobiographical essay "Signature," which closes the second ... Levinas recounts in particular the story of a small dog that attached itself to the work detail and greeted them on their ...
One of those interned inCamp 1492 – Emmanuel Levinas – was entranced by Bobby: wasn't it remarkable that, a time when ... The question, which appeared inhis essay 'The Name of a Dog; or, Natural Rights' (1975), emerged outof the ...
Lenart Škof - 2015 - Preview
I am not going to repeat the well-known story about Lévinas's relationship with Bobby, the (stray) dog from the ... the camp), Lévinas cannot shed his affiliation to the philosophical legacy and gives the dog the oddest name—“the last Kantian in ...
If Schreber's father has never been the symbolic father who established and safeguards the law for his son, it is because ... In the case of Holderlin also, the name-of-the-father is foreclosed, because having never truly accepted his stepfather, ...
symbolic phallus as a correlate of, what he calls, the Name-of-the-Father. When first introducing the concept—in fact, in the context ofa discussion of Lévi-Strauss —Lacan writes, “It is the name of the father that we must recognize as the basis of ...
The name “symptom” is a true name of identity insofar as it names from the point of one and only one singularity. It is the case ... By doing this, he adds a name—“ the necessary son”—to the series of Names of the Father (Lacan, [1979] 1987, p.
Lacan called this third term the Name-of-the-Father or the Father's Name. but by formalizing its action in the form of the paternal metaphor or function. he made it clear that it was not inescapably tied to either biological or de facto fathers- or. for ...
Indeed, although he does not do this systematically, Lacan does not hesitate to speak of the foreclosure of femininity, or, ... Foreclosure in psychosis is the foreclosure of the Name-of-the-Father, a key signifier that “anchors” or “quilts” signifier ...
It is thanks to this Lacanian concept that psychoanalysis has been able to find the theoretical-clinical distinctions that allow the characteristics of psychosis to stand out against those of neurosis. The Name-of-the-Father, a notion substituted for ...
In 1327, Brother William of Baskerville is sent to investigate charges of heresy against Franciscan monks at a wealthy Italian abbey but finds his mission overshadowed by seven bizarre murders. Set in Italy in the Middle Ages, this is not only a narrative of a murder investigation in a monastery in 1327, but also a chronicle of the 14th century religious wars, a history of monastic orders, and a compendium of heretical movements.
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