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result(s) for
"O'Byrne, Anne E. (Anne Elizabeth), 1966-"
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Natality and Finitude
2010
Philosophers are accustomed to thinking about human existence as finite
and deathbound. Anne O'Byrne focuses instead on birth as a way to make sense of
being alive. Building on the work of Heidegger, Dilthey, Arendt, and Nancy, O'Byrne
discusses how the world becomes ours and how meaning emerges from our relations to
generations past and to come. Themes such as creation, time, inheritance, birth and
action, embodiment, biological determinism, and cloning anchor this sensitive and
powerful analysis. O'Byrne's thinking advances and deepens important discussions at
the intersections of feminism, continental philosophy, philosophy of religion, and
social and political thought.
Subjects and Simulations
by
Hey, Damian Ward
,
Bergo, Bettina
,
O'Neill, Basil
in
Philosophy, French
,
Philosophy, French - 21st century
2014
Subjects and Simulations presents essays focused on suffering and sublimity, representation and subjectivity, and the relation of truth and appearance in the twenty-first century. Inspired by the work of Jean Baudrillard, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and JeanLuc Nancy, sixteen authors study how the real reasserts itself in an age of every more fragmented media, and how art and literature give us access to forms of truth that elude philosophy. How does representation grant us access to the place once occupied by the subject? Is political life possible? Can plural thinking be retrieved? Will metaphor and simulation give us ways of being in an evanescent world? The volume engages discussions of French and Continental philosophy, post-structuralism, deconstruction, simulacra, aesthetics, existentialism, and media theory.