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Over the last three decades, Deleuze's consideration of sexual difference beyond the paradigm of the Oedipal family and Western humanism has revolutionized feminist, gender, and queer theory. These critical theorists extend Deleuze's already radical philosophy into ideas of the post-human, truth, reading, sexual difference, and gender politics.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction Part I, Claire Colebrook; Introduction Part II, Jami Weinstein; Articles; The Experimental Ordinary: Deleuze on Eating and Anorexic Elegance, Branka Arsic; Feminist Lines of Flight from the Majoritarian Subject, Tamsin Lorraine; Becoming-Woman: A Flight into Abstraction, Gillian Howie; After Alice: Alice and the Dry Tail, Dorothea Olkowski; Phallocentrism in Bergson: Life and Matter, Rebecca Hill; Reviews; Rosi Braidotti (2002) Metmorphoses: Towards a Feminist Theory of Becoming, Cambridge: Polity Press; Rosi Braidotti (2006) Transpositions: On Nomadic Ethics, Cambridge: Polity Press, Karin Sellberg, University of Edinburgh; Christian Kerslake (2007), Deleuze and the Unconscious, London and New York: Continuum, Sean Bowden, The University of New South Wales & L'Université de Paris VIII, Vincennes - Saint-Denis; Martin-Jones, David (2006) Deleuze, Cinema and National Identity: Narrative Time in National Contexts, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, Anna Powell, Manchester Metropolitan University.
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Professor of English at Penn State University. She is the author of
New Literary Histories (1997),
Gilles Deleuze (2002),
Understanding Deleuze (2002),
Irony in the Work of Philosophy (2002),
Gender (2003) and
Irony: The New Critical Idiom (2003) and the co-editor of
Deleuze and Feminist Theory (1999).Jami Weinstein is Assistant Professor, Gender Studies Department, Utrecht University
Zusammenfassung
A unique new study which extends Deleuze's already radical philosophy into ideas of the post-human, truth, reading, sexual difference and gender politics.