Bloodrites of the Post-Structuralists: Word Flesh and RevolutionRoutledge, 2013年4月15日 - 216 頁 How do you write history when it's no longer linear? In Bloodrites of the Post-Structuralists, respected political theorist Anne Norton reminds us of the real interplay between words (laws, scriptures, myths, and texts), and the world of flesh. Drawing from sources as diverse as foundational myths from Sarah in the bible, Marat in his death bath, and thinkers like Hegel and Foucault, Norton reinterprets the relationship between word and flesh and places it in historical context. The French and English Revolutions, as well as the period of anti-colonialism and post-colonialism are used to frame her discussion of word and body, and their historical significance. |
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Abraham American army authority Baubo become Blake blood Burke Burke's Carlyle Carlyle's Charles Stuart child claim closed body closure colonized concealed constitution contract covenant Cromwell David death death of Marat Declaration Deleuze Demeter Derrida desire discourse Dutch economy Eikon Basilike empire Enlightenment Fanon father feminine fire Foucault France French Revolution Freud Friedrich Nietzsche gaze Glorious Revolution guillotine Ibid imperial inscribed Irigaray Jacobins Jacques Derrida Jews king lack language laughter liberal literary Lord Louis male Marat marked Mary masculine Michel Foucault mother mouth myth nation Nietzsche Oliver Cromwell open body Parliament phallus postcolonial present regicide regime revealed revolutionary Rousseau rule Rushdie Sade Sade's sans-culottes Sarah scripture semiotic sexuality sight speech stadholder tion trans transubstantiation Uday Mehta University Press veil violence Walter Kaufmann William William Blake woman womb women word and flesh writing York