This article provides a critical study of violence in the intersubjective encounter through the sport of boxing. Employing a hauntological method first developed by Jacques Derrida, it uses the phenomenological work of Emmanuel Levinas and the poetically philosophical work of Guilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari to focus on the facial dimension of pugilism. Written as a series of aphorisms, alternating between theoretical reflection and per-sonal recollection, this article examines the face of boxing as it uncovers an ethical understanding of the sport and how that understanding affects the larger culture
This thesis applies trauma theory to three boxing genres: autobiography, fiction, and film, respecti...
This article examines whether boxing, despite – or perhaps because – its destructive potential can b...
International audienceTaking the ethnography of a group of boxers as a basis, this text examines the...
International audienceThis essay offers an ethnography of the ‘conversations of gestures’ that occur...
International audienceThis paper explores the pugilistic involvement as a combat experience whose re...
Pugilism as Mirror and Metafiction in Life and in Contemporary Spanish American Dram
"What separates the chaos of fighting from the coherent ritual of boxing? According to author David ...
At the height of its popularity in the United States, the sport of boxing promised to satisfy the de...
This article uses Oates’s distinction between drama and what is real to explore the culture of boxin...
International audienceOn the basis of an ethnography of a group of boxers, this article questions pu...
Boxing is arguably one of the most visually arresting of sports; its images as potent and corporeal ...
International audienceThe objective of this article, based on four years of ethnographic studies of ...
This thesis applies trauma theory to three boxing genres: autobiography, fiction, and film, respecti...
This article examines whether boxing, despite – or perhaps because – its destructive potential can b...
International audienceTaking the ethnography of a group of boxers as a basis, this text examines the...
International audienceThis essay offers an ethnography of the ‘conversations of gestures’ that occur...
International audienceThis paper explores the pugilistic involvement as a combat experience whose re...
Pugilism as Mirror and Metafiction in Life and in Contemporary Spanish American Dram
"What separates the chaos of fighting from the coherent ritual of boxing? According to author David ...
At the height of its popularity in the United States, the sport of boxing promised to satisfy the de...
This article uses Oates’s distinction between drama and what is real to explore the culture of boxin...
International audienceOn the basis of an ethnography of a group of boxers, this article questions pu...
Boxing is arguably one of the most visually arresting of sports; its images as potent and corporeal ...
International audienceThe objective of this article, based on four years of ethnographic studies of ...
This thesis applies trauma theory to three boxing genres: autobiography, fiction, and film, respecti...
This article examines whether boxing, despite – or perhaps because – its destructive potential can b...
International audienceTaking the ethnography of a group of boxers as a basis, this text examines the...