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Emmanuel Alloa
Former Member
Title
Prof. Dr.
Last Name
Alloa
First name
Emmanuel
Email
emmanuel.alloa@unisg.ch
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1 - 10 of 63
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PublicationL'égalitarisme automatisé. Sur l'idéologie de la Silicon ValleyType: journal articleJournal: EspritIssue: 454
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PublicationVirada icônica: um apelo por três voltas no parafusoType: journal articleJournal: MODOS. Revista de História da ArteVolume: 3Issue: 1
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PublicationDie Hintergründigkeit des Alltags. Überlegungen zu einer Phänomenologie der Alltagserfahrung( 2018)Type: journal articleJournal: Phänomenologische ForschungenIssue: 1
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PublicationEl poder de visualizar. La phantasia según AristótelesType: journal articleJournal: Anuario filosóficoVolume: 51Issue: 2
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PublicationLa comunidad inorgánica: hipótesis sobre el comunismo literario en Novalis, Benjamin y BlanchotType: journal articleJournal: Acta poética : revista semestral del Centro de Poética, Instituto de Investigaciones FilológicasVolume: 39Issue: 2
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PublicationLa pensée phasmeType: journal articleJournal: Europe : revue littéraire mensuelleVolume: 96Issue: 1069
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PublicationMerleau-Ponty à Madagascar : L'épreuve de l'étranger et la décolonisation de la penséeType: journal articleJournal: Chiasmi international : trilingual studies concerning the thought of Merleau-PontyVolume: 19
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PublicationPhasmid thinking : on georges didi-huberman’s methodThis article is an attempt to circumscribe Georges Didi-Huberman’s inimitable practice of theory. It argues that Didi-Huberman’s ethics of looking represents a decided shift away from the traditional position of the critic as a dispassionate, objective observer. A Copernican revolution looms, which inverts the Kantian one: no longer are things adapting to their conceptual scheme, no longer is it the adaequatio rei ad intellectum, but its opposite. Didi-Huberman’s “discourse on method” is to be found in the book Phasmes, where such an “inverted intentionality” is described in terms of the mimicry of the phasmid insects: instead of assimilating the environment to himself, the subject assimilates himself to the environment. Phasmid thinking is the thought of disparateness, i.e., of dis-paring. This means to un-learn or, as it were, to un-prepare oneself in order to see what we believed we were seeing and which we in fact saw precisely because we knew (or believed we knew). In drawing comparisons to similar methodological considerations in Adorno’s “snuggling up to the object,” the article attempts to locate Didi-Huberman’s critical epistemology at the intersection of French and German intellectual traditions.Type: journal articleJournal: Angelaki : journal of the theoretical humanitiesVolume: 23Issue: 4
Scopus© Citations 2