My dissertation explores the enabling contributions of love to the practice of ethicopolitical and cultural critique. Engaging with the work of Alain Badiou, Simone Weil, Erich Fromm, and Roland Barthes, I examine love in terms of the following modalities: waiting, giving, and looking. I place the aforementioned thinkers in dialogue with selected literary and cinematic texts to explicate and interrogate the meaningful possibilities of their discourse on love. In my chapter on Alain Badiou, I discuss his ontology, which I draw upon heavily to set the theoretical parameters of my study. I also discuss the logic of love that he develops in his philosophy. Speaking to the problem of pre‐Evental agency that critics of his work identify, I sugges...
Bibliography: pages 265-273.Introduction -- 1. Max Stirner: loving egoistically -- 2. Søren Kierkega...
Love and Difference: Refuting the ‘Risk-Free’ Conception of Romance Love, as a philosophical topic, ...
This dissertation responds to the question, "What would it be like, what would it mean, to approach ...
My dissertation explores the enabling contributions of love to the practice of ethicopolitical and c...
This thesis considers love through the interlacing of psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan and philosopher Al...
Love has traditionally been thought in conjunction with emotion, affect, passion and feelings. The w...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Johns Hopkins University...
Drawing from Alain Badiou’s concept of inaesthetics, which proposes that art conditions philosophica...
Love has traditionally been thought in conjunction with emotion, affect, passion and feelings. The w...
Abstract In L’Immanence des vérités, Alain Badiou rewrites the Platonic allegory of the cave. As the...
Drawing from Alain Badiou’s concept of inaesthetics, which proposes that art conditions philosophica...
Alain Badiou credits Jacques Lacan with the formulation of an idea of love that demands to be grante...
Abstract: This essay consists of a reading of Shakespeare’s tragedy, Romeo and Juliet, using French ...
The concept of love has historically been somewhat of an embarrassment for Philosophy because it rem...
In this essay, two major books on love are discussed: Love as passion by Niklas Luh- mann and A love...
Bibliography: pages 265-273.Introduction -- 1. Max Stirner: loving egoistically -- 2. Søren Kierkega...
Love and Difference: Refuting the ‘Risk-Free’ Conception of Romance Love, as a philosophical topic, ...
This dissertation responds to the question, "What would it be like, what would it mean, to approach ...
My dissertation explores the enabling contributions of love to the practice of ethicopolitical and c...
This thesis considers love through the interlacing of psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan and philosopher Al...
Love has traditionally been thought in conjunction with emotion, affect, passion and feelings. The w...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Johns Hopkins University...
Drawing from Alain Badiou’s concept of inaesthetics, which proposes that art conditions philosophica...
Love has traditionally been thought in conjunction with emotion, affect, passion and feelings. The w...
Abstract In L’Immanence des vérités, Alain Badiou rewrites the Platonic allegory of the cave. As the...
Drawing from Alain Badiou’s concept of inaesthetics, which proposes that art conditions philosophica...
Alain Badiou credits Jacques Lacan with the formulation of an idea of love that demands to be grante...
Abstract: This essay consists of a reading of Shakespeare’s tragedy, Romeo and Juliet, using French ...
The concept of love has historically been somewhat of an embarrassment for Philosophy because it rem...
In this essay, two major books on love are discussed: Love as passion by Niklas Luh- mann and A love...
Bibliography: pages 265-273.Introduction -- 1. Max Stirner: loving egoistically -- 2. Søren Kierkega...
Love and Difference: Refuting the ‘Risk-Free’ Conception of Romance Love, as a philosophical topic, ...
This dissertation responds to the question, "What would it be like, what would it mean, to approach ...