In order to create a greater dialogue between new and emerging Italian philosophy and established continental traditions of thought, Silvia Benso and Antonio Calcagno bring together the work of well-known figures in Italian philosophy such as Antonio Negri, Roberto Esposito, Remo Bodei, Gianni Vattimo, Massimo Cacciari, and Adriana Cavarero with important thinkers like Schelling, Hegel, Schmitt, Heidegger, Gadamer, Irigaray, Arendt, Deleuze, Guattari, Derrida, and Foucault. In Open Borders, Benso and Calcagno introduce to a larger English-speaking audience the thought of highly regarded late twentieth-century Italian philosophers who seek to redefine concepts such as freedom, interpretation, existence, woman, male-female relationships, realism, emotions, and aesthetics. The diverse contributors to this book often transgress and redefine the limits and insights of philosophy itself and bring to the fore a new body of thinking that offers new ways of self-understanding while deeply engaging the issues and questions of contemporary society.
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Offers a dialogue about the future of the nature of the human, technology, metaphysical foundations, globalization, and social and political oppression.
AcknowledgmentsOpen Borders: IntroductionSilvia Benso and Antonio CalcagnoPart I: Being, Beings, Nothingness1. Luigi Pareyson's Ontology of Freedom: Encounters with Martin Heidegger and F. W. J. SchellingSilvia Benso2. Emanuele Severino versus Western Nihilism (A Guide for the Perplexed)Alessandro Carrera3. Increase or Kenosis: Hermeneutic Ontology between Hans-Georg Gadamer and Gianni VattimoGaetano ChiurazziPart II: Temporality, Subjectivities, Performances4. Lingering Gifts of Time: Ugo Perone, Edith Stein, and Martin Heidegger's Philosophical LegacyAntonio Calcagno5. Failing to Imagine the Lives of Others: Remo Bodei and Jean-Luc Nancy on Citizenship and Sancho PanzaAlexander U. Bertland6. A Political Gesture: The Performance of Carlo Sini and Michel FoucaultEnrico RedaelliPart III: Thinking, Estrangement, Ideologies7. What Does It Mean to Think? Antonio Gramsci and Gilles DeleuzeRichard A. Lee Jr.8. Herbert Marcuse in ItalyMichael E. Gardiner9. Engaging Contemporary Ideology with Mario Perniola, Slavoj Žižek, and Robert PfallerErik M. VogtPart IV: Community, Apocalypse, the Political10. Between the Inoperative and the Coming Community: Jean-Luc Nancy and Giorgio Agamben on the Task of OntologyMaría del Rosario Acosta López11. Who Can Hold the Apocalypse? Massimo Cacciari, Carl Schmitt, and the KatechonPietro Pirani12. Movements or Events? Antonio Negri versus Alain Badiou on PoliticsChristian LotzPart V: Voices of Difference13. A Critique of the Forms of Political Action: Carla Lonzi and G. W. F. HegelMaria Luisa Boccia14. C'è Altro: Luisa Muraro on the Symbolic of Sexual Difference along and beyond Luce IrigarayElvira Roncalli15. Adriana Cavarero and Hannah Arendt: Singular Voices and Horrifying NarrativesPeg BirminghamPart VI: Topology, New Realism, Biopolitics16. Topology at Play: Vincenzo Vitiello and the Word of PhilosophyGiulio Goria17. On the Question of the Face of Reality: Addressing the "Myths" of the New Realism and PostmodernityRita Šerpytyte18. Deconstruction or BiopoliticsRoberto EspositoContributorsIndex
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781438482200
Publisert
2021-07-02
Utgiver
Vendor
State University of New York Press
Vekt
227 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
386