The immense rumor is surprisingly academic. It is a quotation of a quotation of a fragment that may or may not have been authored, in those or similar words, by Aristotle. The rumor is immense because - and this is perhaps its academic attraction - it is obscure. In one translation, it states, O my friends, there is no friend, and suggests a certain absence or impossibility. Like many fragments, it appears paradoxical or enigmatic, but I will argue that in fact it is not. Its origins can be traced to a rumor drawn from law. It describes the long-term of a practice, and it enacts a prohibition. Most significantly, the rumor marks a historical incapacity or debility, the absence of a public language of amity, and thus a practice of the unsp...
Rumor and the unknown This paper examines the stability of the concept of rumor in the past century....
Permission to archive final published version granted by Chief Editor.The author responds to the fiv...
Comparing the Calves‐Head riot of 1734/5 and with John Wilkes’s exposure of the “Medmenham Monks” in...
The immense rumor is surprisingly academic. It is a quotation of a quotation of a fragment that may ...
This essay considers the significance of rumor in the work of Thomas Hardy, anchoring its claims in ...
Jacques Derrida begins the first chapter of his book The Politics of Friendship1 with a statement at...
International audienceResearchers consider rumours from a social psychological view which (Moscovici...
This essay investigates the fragile intersection where rumor and a more authentic modality of lang...
In recent years, scholarly and political discourses have increasingly tended to rhetorically conflat...
A conversational approach is developed to explain the ubiquitous presence of rumors, urban legends, ...
This study takes a soft scientific cut to talks about rumors, hoaxes and urban legends. Social psych...
The dramatic works of Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, and Ben Jonson register a certain ty...
In this paper I reviewed the studies of rumor published in Japan and abroad. The conditions of occur...
This is a story about Alcibiades, about Athens, and about the politics of rumor. When rumor set its ...
The lived experience of thinking matter finds its existential limit in Jacques Derrida’s Law of Frie...
Rumor and the unknown This paper examines the stability of the concept of rumor in the past century....
Permission to archive final published version granted by Chief Editor.The author responds to the fiv...
Comparing the Calves‐Head riot of 1734/5 and with John Wilkes’s exposure of the “Medmenham Monks” in...
The immense rumor is surprisingly academic. It is a quotation of a quotation of a fragment that may ...
This essay considers the significance of rumor in the work of Thomas Hardy, anchoring its claims in ...
Jacques Derrida begins the first chapter of his book The Politics of Friendship1 with a statement at...
International audienceResearchers consider rumours from a social psychological view which (Moscovici...
This essay investigates the fragile intersection where rumor and a more authentic modality of lang...
In recent years, scholarly and political discourses have increasingly tended to rhetorically conflat...
A conversational approach is developed to explain the ubiquitous presence of rumors, urban legends, ...
This study takes a soft scientific cut to talks about rumors, hoaxes and urban legends. Social psych...
The dramatic works of Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, and Ben Jonson register a certain ty...
In this paper I reviewed the studies of rumor published in Japan and abroad. The conditions of occur...
This is a story about Alcibiades, about Athens, and about the politics of rumor. When rumor set its ...
The lived experience of thinking matter finds its existential limit in Jacques Derrida’s Law of Frie...
Rumor and the unknown This paper examines the stability of the concept of rumor in the past century....
Permission to archive final published version granted by Chief Editor.The author responds to the fiv...
Comparing the Calves‐Head riot of 1734/5 and with John Wilkes’s exposure of the “Medmenham Monks” in...