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Seite 49
... grows out of testimony's limitations as an epistemic discourse , which in turn derive from its ontological dividedness against itself ( as is the case with all concepts under the regime of a deconstructive " hauntology " ) .
... grows out of testimony's limitations as an epistemic discourse , which in turn derive from its ontological dividedness against itself ( as is the case with all concepts under the regime of a deconstructive " hauntology " ) .
Seite 52
... ( especially of the synthetic variety ) , and testimony in turn as the felicitous communication of that knowledge , the failure to know — a failure that we are at every turn forced to admit — will make testimony impossible .
... ( especially of the synthetic variety ) , and testimony in turn as the felicitous communication of that knowledge , the failure to know — a failure that we are at every turn forced to admit — will make testimony impossible .
Seite 122
I will discuss the publication of Fragments as a key watershed in the Swiss cultural debate about the Holocaust , and as a text which is itself , in turn , shaped by the emerging discourses of the guilt and culpability of Switzerland ...
I will discuss the publication of Fragments as a key watershed in the Swiss cultural debate about the Holocaust , and as a text which is itself , in turn , shaped by the emerging discourses of the guilt and culpability of Switzerland ...
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Inhalt
The Future of Testimony | 4 |
Testimony Quantification and Need | 19 |
A Genealogical Perspective | 36 |
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affect African agency American archive argues articulated attempt become beginning believe body bombing Bridge characters child claims comes continue course crime critical cultural death Derrida describes desire discourse discussion essay ethical event experience face fact father feel fiction Fragments Freud future give hand happened Holocaust human Hurston identity individual John knowledge Kossula language limit literature live marks means memory Michigan mourning murder narrative never object origin pain past person political position possible practices precisely present question readers reading referent relation remains represent representation response seems sense sexual social speak story studies suffering suggest television tell testify testimony things thought tion trauma true crime truth turn understand University victims violence voice witness women writing York