JCRT 9.2 Summer 2008 | Homepage 1 Archives 1 Search 1 Blog |
Vol. 9, no. 2 - Summer 2008 |
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An Extrinsic Eagleton What are we to make of Terry Eagleton’s arguments, in the early years of the new millennium, for the intrinsicness of a range of virtues and vices... |
Buddhism, Apophasis,
Truth |
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From Representation to
Constituent Power: Religion, or Something Whoever comments on Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri’s work Empire must do more than point out the empirical realities that run counter to the authors’... |
Politics and
Perversion: Situating Zizek's Paul What is distinctive about Slavoj Žižek’s interpretation of Paul is not immediately clear. This is due first of all to the context in which his primary readings... |
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The Sublime and the
Messianic: A Reply to Agata Bielek-Robson Clayton Crockett First of all, I want to thank Agata Bielek-Robson for this engaging and critical review of Interstices of the Sublime. In response, and I appreciate the editors of the... |
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The Traps of
the Sublime The new book of Clayton Crockett, Interstices of the Sublime, can be regarded as a sequel to his Theology of the Sublime, where he attempted an analysis....
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Caute: Jonathan
Israel's Secular Modernity Russ Leo In her recent study $urplus: Spinoza, Lacan (2007), A. Kiarina Kordela reads Jonathan Israel alongside Gilles Deleuze, Félix Guattari, Antonio...
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Chosen by
Mark Millar Scottish author Mark Millar’s controversial, three-issue comic book, Chosen, which was published serially in 2004, is collected in an impressive soft-cover edition... |
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