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Results for 'Michaelanne Butler'

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  1.  51
    Fixing food with a limited menu: on (digital) solutionism in the agri-food tech sector.Julie Guthman &MichaelanneButler -2023 -Agriculture and Human Values 40 (3):835-848.
    Silicon Valley and its innovation center counterparts have come upon food and agriculture as the next frontier for their unique style of innovation and impact. But what exactly can the tech sector, with expertise in information and communication technologies, bring to a domain in which the biophysical materiality of soil, plants, animals and human bodies have most challenged farmers and food companies? Based on a detailed analysis of all of the companies that have pitched their products at events sponsored by (...) the Silicon Valley-based convener, Foodbytes!, we show that a large proportion of tech-driven solutions are digital technologies transferred from other domains. These technologies at best inform decision-making on the ecological processes of food and farming, but do not provide tools to treat them, and otherwise provide business solutions not even aimed at major challenges in food and farming. Drawing on a small set of interview data, we additionally suggest that tech entrepreneurs migrate to food and agriculture because it seems purposeful, exciting, or lucrative, but sometimes lack a clear understanding of the problems they might solve with their digital technologies. In making our case about the mismatch of problem and solution, we bring into conversation recent critiques of digital solutionism with abiding concerns in agrarian political economy and critical food studies regarding the role of the biological in both challenging food production and spurring technological intervention. (shrink)
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  2. Consuming nature : from the politics of purchasing to the politics of ingestion.Julie Guthman &MichaelanneButler -2024 - In Gregory Simon & Kelly Kay,Doing political ecology. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  3.  40
    Cartesian Psychology and Physical Minds: Individualism and the Sciences of the Mind.KeithButler -1995 -Philosophical and Phenomenological Research 58 (3):723-726.
    This book is an extended discussion of individualism in the philosophy of mind.
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  4.  30
    JudithButler in Conversation: Analyzing the Texts and Talk of Everyday Life.JudithButler &Bronwyn Davies (eds.) -2007 - Routledge.
    Contains responses from social critic JudithButler to essays on her work from across the social sciences, humanities, and behavioral sciences.
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  5. The Notebooks of SamuelButler.SamuelButler &Henry Festing Jones -1913 -International Journal of Ethics 23 (4):497-499.
     
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  6. VIOLENCE D'ÉTAT, COALITIONS, SUJETS: Un entretien de Gabriel GIRARD et Olivier NEVEUX avec JudithBUTLER.Gabriel Girard,Olivier Neveux &JudithButler -2009 -Actuel Marx 45 (1):164 - 174.
    State Violence, Coalitions, Subjects After a consideration of the reception of her work in France , JudithButler assesses the political contribution of queer movements and minority struggles. She addresses the need for the left to reappropriate the forthright critique of the State and its violence and to examine the way minorities are produced. To do so, her analysis starts from the question of immigrant persons. She highlights the issues and the difficulties which are involved, if there is to (...) be a productive critique of the State, the aim of which is to contest it. As part of a dynamic political perspective, she proposes the creation of coalitions. She outlines the main lines of such a coalition, its dynamics and singularities, its articulation with the subject, but also its limits. In conclusion, she examines the issue of revolution and her relation to Marxist thought, indicating the outlines of her current thinking. (shrink)
     
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  7.  189
    The Future of Sexual Difference: An Interview with JudithButler and Drucilla Cornell.JudithButler,Drucilla Cornell,Pheng Cheah &E. A. Grosz -1998 -Diacritics 28 (1):19-42.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Future of Sexual Difference: An Interview with JudithButler and Drucilla Cornell*Pheng Cheah (bio) and Elizabeth Grrosz (bio)EG:Luce Irigaray’s writings have always figured strongly in your works, probably more than in the work of other American feminist theorists. Out of all the feminist theorists you both interrogate, she seems to emerge as a kind of touchstone of the feminist ethical, political, and intellectual concerns to which you (...) seem to aspire. Could each of you briefly outline how she figures in your work, whether your relations to her have changed, and if so, how?JB:I think that probably early on, when I started working on French feminism as a graduate student in the early ‘80s, I was not interested in her at all because she seemed to me to be an essentialist and that was a term we used quite easily then, when we thought we knew what it meant. In the late ‘80s, I started to rethink my objections to her on that basis and found that she was, among the feminist theorists I had read, perhaps the most versed in philosophy and that her engagement with philosophy was a curious mixture of both loyalty and aggression. And it became very interesting to me when I started thinking about her whole practice of critical mimesis—what she was doing when she was reading Freud, what was she doing when she was reading Plato—and I read Speculum again and again, frightened by its anger, compelled by the closeness of the reading, confused by the mimetism of the text. Was she enslaved to these texts, was she displacing them radically, was she perhaps in the bind of being in both positions at the same time? And I realized that whatever the feminine was for her, it was not a substance, not a spiritual reality that might be isolated, but it had something to do with this strange practice of reading, one in which she was reading texts that she was not authorized to read, texts from which she was as a woman explicitly excluded or explicitly demeaned, and that she would read them anyway. And then the question is: what would it mean to read from a position of radical deauthorization in order to expose the contingent authority of the text? That struck me as a feminist critical practice, a critical reading practice that I could learn from, and from that point on, highly influenced by both Drucilla’s work and Naomi Schor’s work [see Schor], I started to read her quite thoroughly.PC:Is this kind of relationship that she has with the philosophers she reads a sexual relationship? I am thinking of some of the sexualized terms you just used: loyalty and aggression.JB:Yes, there is no doubt that there is an eros of a certain kind, usually the kind that frightens me, quite frankly. I think Carolyn Burke has made this argument that Irigaray [End Page 19] has a romance with the philosophers [see Burke]. I think she has a certain masochistic-sadistic erotic engagement with the philosophers.EG:Do you think it is sado-masochistic?JB:Well, I think it was much more aggressive in Speculum of the Other Woman than it became in An Ethics of Sexual Difference. There, I think there is an engagement that is still very difficult, but at least there is evidence of a more loving engagement.PC:I hope that we can return to the question of love at the end. Is this the kind of relationship that you have to her texts?JB:No, I’m probably too frightened. [Everybody laughs.] And I don’t engage them that closely, probably because I find it frightening to be in that particular knot. She doesn’t actually have a chapter in any of my books. I think I can’t quite devote a chapter to her....EG:No, but you devote large sections of chapters....JB:That’s true, but I can’t stay there for a prolonged period of time [laughs], whatever that’s worth.EG:I’d like to come back to this later, because I think it is a really interesting... (shrink)
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  8.  42
    The Correspondence between JosephButler and Samuel Clarke.JosephButler &Samuel Clarke -2007 -Idea. Studia Nad Strukturą I Rozwojem Pojęć Filozoficznych 19:173-193.
  9.  83
    Reply from JudithButler.JudithButler -2018 -Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 96 (1):243-249.
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  10.  290
    Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of Sex.JudithButler -1993 - New York: Routledge.
    In ____Bodies That Matter,__ JudithButler further develops her distinctive theory of gender by examining the workings of power at the most "material" dimensions of sex and sexuality. Deepening the inquiries she began in _Gender_ _Trouble,_Butler offers an original reformulation of the materiality of bodies, examining how the power of heterosexual hegemony forms the "matter" of bodies, sex, and gender.Butler argues that power operates to constrain "sex" from the start, delimiting what counts as a viable (...) sex. She offers a clarification of the notion of "performativity" introduced in _Gender Trouble_ and explores the meaning of a citational politics. The text includes readings of Plato, Irigaray, Lacan, and Freud on the formation of materiality and bodily boundaries; "Paris is Burning," Nella Larsen's "Passing," and short stories by Willa Cather; along with a reconsideration of "performativity" and politics in feminist, queer, and radical democratic theory. (shrink)
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  11.  104
    ClarkButler -- peaceful coexistence as the nuclear traumatization of humanity.ClarkButler -1984 -Philosophy and Social Criticism 10 (3-4):81-94.
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  12.  20
    Commentary onButler.JudithButler -2005 - In Kim Atkins,Self and Subjectivity. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 252–265.
    This chapter contains section titled: “Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity”.
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  13.  51
    Politik, Körper, Vulnerabilität Ein Gespräch mit JudithButler.JudithButler -2018 - In Sergej Seitz, Tatjana Schönwälder-Kuntze & Gerald Posselt,Judith Butlers Philosophie des Politischen: Kritische Lektüren. Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag. pp. 299-322.
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  14.  14
    JudithButler, du genre à la non-violence.Mylène Botbol-Baum &JudithButler (eds.) -2017 - [Nantes]: Les éditions nouvelles Cécile Defaut.
    Cet ouvrage est construit autour d'un chapitre (texte original) de JudithButler sur l'éthique de la non-violence. En réponse se construisent quatre réflexions philosophiques. Mylène Botbol-Baum présente le collectif à partir de sa traduction du texte de JudithButler, et aborde la question du sujet et de la norme à partir de la lecture butlerienne de Levinas et Arendt, sur la question des limites de la légitimité de la violence pour une éthique de la relationalité. Jean de Munck (...) traite une lecture croisée de Benjamin etButler sur la violence. Romildo Pineiro et Jose Erraruz off rent une lecture historique et politique du concept de violence et y confrontent l'interprétation de la non violence dans le texte deButler. Trois textes plus sociologiques suivent sur l'impact de la non-violence, dans une perspective qui vise à " défaire le genre " dans le cadre sociopolitique critique des vulnérabilités, dans le cadre du travail des femmes migrantes (Ghaliya Dejelloul) ou du travail domestique non rémunéré (Anna Safuta), à partir d'une enquête sur la mobilité spatiale des femmes dans les zones pré-urbaines d'Alger ou de Bruxelles, off rant une analyse sur l'hostilité masculine et le rôle du discours religieux dans la légitimation de cette violence. Matthieu de Nanteuil conclut le volume sur la question de la violence et de la sensibilité politique en mettant à jour la théorie de la démocratie radicale chez JudithButler. Il sera donc question dans ce volume de penser la non-violence à partir d'une approche fondée sur la normalisation des corps, en réintroduisant le sujet de la vie comme interlocuteur critique du sujet de la norme en démocratie. (shrink)
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  15.  76
    The Future of Sexual Difference: An Interview with JudithButler and Drucilla Cornell.JudithButler,Drucilla Cornell,Cheah Pheng &Elizabeth Grosz -1998 -Diacritics 28 (1):19-42.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Future of Sexual Difference: An Interview with JudithButler and Drucilla Cornell*Pheng Cheah (bio) and Elizabeth Grrosz (bio)EG:Luce Irigaray’s writings have always figured strongly in your works, probably more than in the work of other American feminist theorists. Out of all the feminist theorists you both interrogate, she seems to emerge as a kind of touchstone of the feminist ethical, political, and intellectual concerns to which you (...) seem to aspire. Could each of you briefly outline how she figures in your work, whether your relations to her have changed, and if so, how?JB:I think that probably early on, when I started working on French feminism as a graduate student in the early ‘80s, I was not interested in her at all because she seemed to me to be an essentialist and that was a term we used quite easily then, when we thought we knew what it meant. In the late ‘80s, I started to rethink my objections to her on that basis and found that she was, among the feminist theorists I had read, perhaps the most versed in philosophy and that her engagement with philosophy was a curious mixture of both loyalty and aggression. And it became very interesting to me when I started thinking about her whole practice of critical mimesis—what she was doing when she was reading Freud, what was she doing when she was reading Plato—and I read Speculum again and again, frightened by its anger, compelled by the closeness of the reading, confused by the mimetism of the text. Was she enslaved to these texts, was she displacing them radically, was she perhaps in the bind of being in both positions at the same time? And I realized that whatever the feminine was for her, it was not a substance, not a spiritual reality that might be isolated, but it had something to do with this strange practice of reading, one in which she was reading texts that she was not authorized to read, texts from which she was as a woman explicitly excluded or explicitly demeaned, and that she would read them anyway. And then the question is: what would it mean to read from a position of radical deauthorization in order to expose the contingent authority of the text? That struck me as a feminist critical practice, a critical reading practice that I could learn from, and from that point on, highly influenced by both Drucilla’s work and Naomi Schor’s work [see Schor], I started to read her quite thoroughly.PC:Is this kind of relationship that she has with the philosophers she reads a sexual relationship? I am thinking of some of the sexualized terms you just used: loyalty and aggression.JB:Yes, there is no doubt that there is an eros of a certain kind, usually the kind that frightens me, quite frankly. I think Carolyn Burke has made this argument that Irigaray [End Page 19] has a romance with the philosophers [see Burke]. I think she has a certain masochistic-sadistic erotic engagement with the philosophers.EG:Do you think it is sado-masochistic?JB:Well, I think it was much more aggressive in Speculum of the Other Woman than it became in An Ethics of Sexual Difference. There, I think there is an engagement that is still very difficult, but at least there is evidence of a more loving engagement.PC:I hope that we can return to the question of love at the end. Is this the kind of relationship that you have to her texts?JB:No, I’m probably too frightened. [Everybody laughs.] And I don’t engage them that closely, probably because I find it frightening to be in that particular knot. She doesn’t actually have a chapter in any of my books. I think I can’t quite devote a chapter to her....EG:No, but you devote large sections of chapters....JB:That’s true, but I can’t stay there for a prolonged period of time [laughs], whatever that’s worth.EG:I’d like to come back to this later, because I think it is a really interesting... (shrink)
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  16.  61
    Image, Rhetoric, and Politics in the early Thomas Hobbes.Todd WayneButler -2006 -Journal of the History of Ideas 67 (3):465-487.
    While critics have relied upon bibliographical data and his translation of Thucydides to establish the early Thomas Hobbes as a humanist, this essay argues that substantive evidence to support this conclusion can be found in the comparatively neglected discourses of the Horae Subsecivae. Reading Hobbe's contribution to the Horae alongside his translation of Thucydides reveals a consistent concern with the political potential of both verbal and visual images and with the dangers rhetorical manipulation could pose to individual and sovereign authority. (...) Together these texts demonstrate an early Hobbes already deeply invested in the political debates and crises of his era. (shrink)
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  17. Contingent Foundations' in S. Benhabib, J.Butler, D. Cornell and N. Fraser.JudithButler -1995 - In Seyla Benhabib,Feminist contentions: a philosophical exchange. New York: Routledge.
  18.  35
    JudithButler: un compromiso vivo con la política. Entrevista con JudithButler (Febrero 2016).Emma Ingala &JudithButler -2017 -Isegoría 56:21-37.
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  19.  627
    Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity.JudithButler -1989 - Routledge.
    One of the most talked-about scholarly works of the past fifty years, JudithButler’s _Gender Trouble_ is as celebrated as it is controversial. Arguing that traditional feminism is wrong to look to a natural, 'essential' notion of the female, or indeed of sex or gender,Butler starts by questioning the category 'woman' and continues in this vein with examinations of 'the masculine' and 'the feminine'. Best known however, but also most often misinterpreted, isButler's concept of gender (...) as a reiterated social _performance _rather than the expression of a prior reality. Thrilling and provocative, few other academic works have roused passions to the same extent. (shrink)
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  20.  93
    Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity.JudithButler -1990 - Routledge.
    One of the most talked-about scholarly works of the past fifty years, JudithButler’s _Gender Trouble_ is as celebrated as it is controversial. Arguing that traditional feminism is wrong to look to a natural, 'essential' notion of the female, or indeed of sex or gender,Butler starts by questioning the category 'woman' and continues in this vein with examinations of 'the masculine' and 'the feminine'. Best known however, but also most often misinterpreted, isButler's concept of gender (...) as a reiterated social _performance _rather than the expression of a prior reality. Thrilling and provocative, few other academic works have roused passions to the same extent. (shrink)
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  21.  21
    Frederic R. Kellogg, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. and Legal Logic. Reviewed b.Brian E.Butler -2019 -Philosophy in Review 39 (1):26-28.
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  22. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity.JudithButler &Suzanne Pharr -1990 -Hypatia 5 (3):171-175.
  23. Civil religion : secularism as religion?JudithButler -2020 - In Ann Laura Stoler, Stathis Gourgouris & Jacques Lezra,Thinking with Balibar: A Lexicon of Conceptual Practice. New York: Fordham University Press.
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  24. The Role of Global Institutional Investors-Shareholder Engagement Opportunities for a New Era.PeterButler -2002 - In Ian Jones & Michael G. Pollitt,Understanding how issues in business ethics develop. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 145.
     
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  25.  60
    What World is This?: A Pandemic Phenomenology.JudithButler -2022 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    The pandemic compels us to ask fundamental questions about our place in the world: the many ways humans rely on one another, how we vitally and sometimes fatally breathe the same air, share the surfaces of the earth, and exist in proximity to other porous creatures in order to live in a social world. What we require to live can also imperil our lives. How do we think from, and about, this common bind? JudithButler shows how COVID-19 and (...) all its consequences—political, social, ecological, economic—have challenged us to reconsider the sense of the world that such disasters bring about. Drawing on the work of Max Scheler, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and critical feminist phenomenology,Butler illuminates the conditions in which we seek to make sense of our disorientation, precarity, and social bonds. What World Is This? offers a new account of interdependency in which touching and breathing, capacities that amid a viral outbreak can threaten life itself, challenge the boundaries of the body and selfhood. Criticizing notions of unlimited personal liberty and the killing forces of racism, sexism, and classism, this book suggests that the pandemic illuminates the potential of shared vulnerabilities as well as the injustice of pervasive inequalities. Exposing and opposing forms of injustice that deny the essential interrelationship of living creatures,Butler argues for a radical social equality and advocates modes of resistance that seek to establish new conditions of livability and a new sense of a shared world. (shrink)
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  26.  440
    Giving an Account of Oneself.JudithButler -2005 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Offers an outline for a new ethical practice - one responsive to the need for critical autonomy and grounded in a new sense of the human subject. The author demonstrates how difficult it is to give an account of oneself, and how this lack of self-transparency and narratibility is crucial to an ethical understanding of the human.
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  27.  135
    Subjects of desire: Hegelian reflections in twentieth-century France.JudithButler -1987 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    This classic work by one of the most important philosophers and critics of our time charts the genesis and trajectory of the desiring subject from Hegel's formulation in Phenomenology of Spirit to its appropriation by Kojève, Hyppolite, Sartre, Lacan, Deleuze, and Foucault. JudithButler plots the French reception of Hegel and the successive challenges waged against his metaphysics and view of the subject, all while revealing ambiguities within his position. The result is a sophisticated reconsideration of the post-Hegelian tradition (...) that has predominated in modern French thought, and her study remains a provocative and timely intervention in contemporary debates over the unconscious, the powers of subjection, and the subject. (shrink)
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  28.  52
    Using a balanced approach to bibliometrics: quantitative performance measures in the Australian Research Quality Framework.LindaButler -2008 -Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 8 (1):83-92.
  29.  25
    La supervision en thérapie de couple.Annie deButler -2004 -Dialogue: Families & Couples 166 (4):45-58.
    La supervision individuelle ou en groupe permet à tout thérapeute formé selon les concepts théoriques et l’approche clinique de la psychanalyse de forger ses propres outils. Dans un groupe de supervision, chacun apporte les difficultés sur lesquelles il bute dans la mise en place et le déroulement d’une thérapie. Le groupe réfléchit, dans tous les sens du terme, ce qui permet au thérapeute de percevoir ce qui jusque là lui échappait – qu’il s’agisse du fonctionnement symptomatique des patients entre eux (...) ou de ce qui se passe entre eux et lui lorsque s’éclairent les mouvements du transfert. Le groupe est à la fois environnement sécurisant, structure et appareil de liaison, la groupalité étant une dimension du sujet. Tout se passe comme si l’appareil psychique groupal reprenait à son compte le travail d’élaboration psychique du thérapeute, qui, pour le moment, se plaint de ne plus avoir la capacité de penser. Le superviseur est garant du cadre. De lui dépend également la spontanéité et la qualité des échanges ainsi que le climat de confiance indispensable au plaisir de travailler ensemble dans un rapport de parité. (shrink)
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  30. Mumbo Jumbo, Theory, and the Aesthetics of Wholeness.Johnella E.Butler -2002 - In Emory Elliott, Louis Freitas Caton & Jeffrey Rhyne,Aesthetics in a multicultural age. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 175--193.
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  31. Soft American Empire vs. Playing the E.U.-U.N. Card.ClarkButler -unknown
    Neither journalistic nor sensationalistic eye-witness accounts, this is the first book of serious reflection on the moral background and issues of internal legality surrounding the events of Guantanamo Bay.
     
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  32. The Meaning of Education : Contributions to a Philosophy of Education. --.Nicholas MurrayButler -1915 - Scribner.
     
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  33.  10
    Le « pousse à l'acte » dans le couple et dans la fratrie.Annie deButler &Régine Scelles -2001 -Dialogue: Families & Couples 154 (4):37.
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  34.  65
    The analogy of religion.JosephButler -1736 - Wentworth Press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...) in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant. (shrink)
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  35.  61
    Inattentional blindness for ignored words: Comparison of explicit and implicit memory tasks.Beverly C.Butler &Raymond Klein -2009 -Consciousness and Cognition 18 (3):811-819.
    Inattentional blindness is described as the failure to perceive a supra-threshold stimulus when attention is directed away from that stimulus. Based on performance on an explicit recognition memory test and concurrent functional imaging data Rees, Russell, Frith, and Driver [Rees, G., Russell, C., Frith, C. D., & Driver, J. . Inattentional blindness versus inattentional amnesia for fixated but ignored words. Science, 286, 2504–2507] reported inattentional blindness for word stimuli that were fixated but ignored. The present study examined both explicit and (...) implicit memory for fixated but ignored words using a selective-attention task in which overlapping picture/word stimuli were presented at fixation. No explicit awareness of the unattended words was apparent on a recognition memory test. Analysis of an implicit memory task, however, indicated that unattended words were perceived at a perceptual level. Thus, the selective-attention task did not result in perfect filtering as suggested by Rees et al. While there was no evidence of conscious perception, subjects were not blind to the implicit perceptual properties of fixated but ignored words. (shrink)
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  36.  133
    Antigone's Claim: Kinship Between Life and Death.JudithButler -2000 - Columbia University Press.
    The celebrated author of _Gender Trouble_ here redefines Antigone's legacy, recovering her revolutionary significance and liberating it for a progressive feminism and sexual politics.Butler's new interpretation does nothing less than reconceptualize the incest taboo in relation to kinship -- and open up the concept of kinship to cultural change. Antigone, the renowned insurgent from Sophocles's _Oedipus,_ has long been a feminist icon of defiance. But what has remained unclear is whether she escapes from the forms of power that (...) she opposes. Antigone proves to be a more ambivalent figure for feminism than has been acknowledged, since the form of defiance she exemplifies also leads to her death.Butler argues that Antigone represents a form of feminist and sexual agency that is fraught with risk. Moreover, Antigone shows how the constraints of normative kinship unfairly decide what will and will not be a livable life.Butler explores the meaning of Antigone, wondering what forms of kinship might have allowed her to live. Along the way, she considers the works of such philosophers as Hegel, Lacan, and Irigaray. How, she asks, would psychoanalysis have been different if it had taken Antigone -- the "postoedipal" subject -- rather than Oedipus as its point of departure? If the incest taboo is reconceived so that it does not mandate heterosexuality as its solution, what forms of sexual alliance and new kinship might be acknowledged as a result? The book relates the courageous deeds of Antigone to the claims made by those whose relations are still not honored as those of proper kinship, showing how a culture of normative heterosexuality obstructs our capacity to see what sexual freedom and political agency could be. (shrink)
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  37.  69
    Alva Nöe. Strange Tools: Art and Human Nature, written by Brian E.Butler.Brian E.Butler -2017 -Contemporary Pragmatism 14 (2):243-258.
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  38.  406
    The JudithButler Reader.Sara Salih &JudithButler -2004 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    The JudithButler Reader is a collection of writings that span her impressive career and trace her intellectual history. JudithButler, author of influential books such as Gender Trouble, has built her international reputation as a theorist of power, gender, sexuality and identity Organized in active collaboration between JudithButler and Sara Salih Collects together writings that spanButler’s impressive career as a critical philosopher, including selections from both well-known and lesser-known works Includes an introduction and (...) editorial material to assist students in their readings of theories that stand at the forefront of contemporary theoretical and political debates. (shrink)
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  39.  50
    Discursive construction and negotiation of laity on an online health forum.Antoinette Fage-Butler &Patrizia Anesa -2016 -Pragmatics and Society 7 (2):196-216.
    E-patients are increasingly using the Internet to gain knowledge about medical conditions, thereby problematizing the biomedical assumption that patients are ‘lay’. The present paper addresses this development by investigating the epistemic identities of patients participating on an online health forum. Using poststructuralist discourse analysis to analyze a corpus of cardiology-related threads on an ‘Ask a Doctor’ forum, we compare how patients are discursively constructed by online professionals as ‘knowing’ or ‘not knowing’ with the online knowledge identities patients choose for themselves. (...) Analysis reveals a complex picture, with patients positioning themselves and being constructed as biomedical novices, as well as claiming the subject positions of experts challenging medical expertise. This paper provides a snapshot of an important social identity in transition, illustrates a procedure for comparing language use around imposed and self-appropriated identities, and considers discursive choice in relation to the metapragmatic matter of “sayability”. (shrink)
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  40.  247
    Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative.JudithButler -1997 - Routledge.
    With the same intellectual courage with which she addressed issues of gender, JudithButler turns her attention to speech and conduct in contemporary political life, looking at several efforts to target speech as conduct that has become subject to political debate and regulation. Reviewing hate speech regulations, anti-pornography arguments, and recent controversies about gay self-declaration in the military, JudithButler asks whether and how language acts in each of these cultural sites.
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  41. Heuristic Dogmatism.ClarkButler -unknown
    This article distinguishes between dogmatism as usually understood, unconditional dogmatism, and "dogmatism" in good sense, heuristic dogmatism. Reprinted as "Philosophy: What it is and Why" in Statements, edited for classroom use by Kathleen Squadrito, pp. 1-10.
     
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  42. Postmodernism and Moral Philosophy.ChristopherButler -1996 - In Gerhard Hoffmann & Alfred Hornung,Ethics and aesthetics: the moral turn of postmodernism. Heidelberg: C. Winter. pp. 69--86.
  43. Systemic Grammar in applied language studies.C.Butler -1993 - In R. E. Asher & J. M. Y. Simpson,The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Pergamon. pp. 8--4500.
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  44. The wonders of ancient Mesopotamia.AnneButler -2012 -Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 47 (2):41.
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  45.  33
    Ça ne me regarde pas... ou je n'en veux rien savoir?.Annie deButler -2009 -Dialogue: Families & Couples 182 (4):39-55.
    Comment départager ce qui est à travailler au sein du groupe thérapeutique et ce qui ne nous regarde pas, nous thérapeutes? Autant de frontières entre l’autre et soi, entre les motivations conscientes et les désirs inconscients, qui sont à la fois signifiantes et difficilement repérables. Le travail du thérapeute sur son contre-transfert lui permet de faire la différence entre ce qui ne le regarde pas et ce dont il préfère ne rien savoir.
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  46.  9
    Quand l'arrivée des enfants fait basculer le couple.Annie deButler -2002 -Dialogue: Families & Couples 157 (3):117.
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  47.  187
    Politics, power and ethics: A discussion between JudithButler and William Connolly.JudithButler &William E. Connolly -2000 -Theory and Event 4 (2).
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  48.  18
    Butler on Whitehead: On the Occasion.Jeffrey A. Bell,Vikki Bell,JudithButler,Daniel A. Dombrowski,Jeremy D. Fackenthal,Kirsten M. Gerdes,Sigridur Guðmarsdóttir,Catherine Keller,Matthew S. LoPresti,Astrid Lorange,Randy Ramal &Alan Van Wyk (eds.) -2012 - Lexington Books.
    Considered together,Butler and Whitehead draw from a wide palette of disciplines to develop distinctive theories of becoming, of syntactical violence, and creative opportunities of limitation. The contributors of this volume offer a unique contribution to and for the humanities in the struggles of politics, economy, ecology, and the arts.
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  49.  38
    The Livable and the Unlivable.JudithButler &Frédéric Worms -2023 - New York: Fordham University Press. Edited by Frédéric Worms, Arto Charpentier, Laure Barillas & Zakiya Hanafi.
    The unlivable is the most extreme point of human suffering and injustice. But what is it exactly? How do we define the unlivable? And what can we do to prevent and repair it? These are the intriguing questions JudithButler and Frédéric Worms discuss in a captivating dialogue situated at the crossroads of contemporary life and politics. Here, JudithButler criticizes the norms that make life precarious and unlivable, while Frédéric Worms appeals to a "critical vitalism" as a (...) way of allowing the hardship of the unlivable to reveal what is vital for us. For bothButler and Worms, the difference between the livable and the unlivable forms the critical foundation for a contemporary practice of care. Care and support, in all their aspects, make human life livable, that is, "more than living." To understand it, we must draw on the concrete practices of humans who are confronted with the unlivable: the refugees of today and the witnesses and survivors of past violations and genocide. They teach us what is intolerable but also undeniable about the unlivable, and what we can do to resist it. Crafted with critical rigor, mutual respect, and lively humor, the compelling dialogue transcribed and translated in this book took place at the École Normale Supérieure (ENS) on April 11, 2018, at a time when close to two thousand migrants were living in nearby makeshift camps in northern Paris. The Livable and the Unlivable showcases this 2018 dialogue in the context ofButler's and Worms's ongoing work and the evolution of their thought, as presented by Laure Barillas and Arto Charpentier in their equally engaging introduction. It concludes with a new afterword that addresses the crises unfolding in our world and the ways a philosophically rigorous account of life must confront them. While this book will be of keen interest to readers of philosophy and cultural criticism, and those interested in vitalism, new materialism, and critical theory, it is a far from merely academic text. In the conversation betweenButler and Worms, we encounter questions we all grapple with in confronting the distress and precarity of our times, marked as it is by types of survival that are unlivable, from concentration camps to prisons to environmental toxicity, to forcible displacement, to the Covid pandemic. The Livable and the Unlivable at once considers longstanding philosophical questions around why and how we live, while working to retrieve a philosophy of life for today's Left. (shrink)
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  50. [no title].JudithButler -unknown
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