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New critical humanities.
The ends of critique: methods, institutions, politics / edited by Kathrin Thiele, Birgit M. Kaiser, and Timothy O'Leary. — 1 online resource. — (New critical humanities). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/3146772.pdf>.

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"The Ends of Critique re-examines the stakes of critique in the 21st century. In view of increasingly complex socio-political realities and shifts in a fully globalized world, the roles and manners of critique also change. The volume offers an unprecedented re-examination of critique under those conditions of global entanglement and asymmetrical relations from a diversity of scholarly perspectives within the humanities. All contributions move the notion of critique into more diverse traditions than the Eurocentric, Kantian tradition and emphasize the need to attend to a plurality of critical perspectives. The volume's reflections move critique toward a situated, perspectival, and entangled critical stance, with interventions from decolonial and systemic, deconstructive and (post)human(ist) perspectives. In that way, the volume develops a decidedly different approach to critique than recent considerations of critique as post-critique (Felski) or those endebted to Frankfurt School thought and liberal theories of democracy. It is the first full-length research publication of the interdisciplinary research network Terra Critica"--.

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  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Series page
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
    • Critique
    • Methods, Institutions, Politics
    • The Ends of Critique: Overview
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Part I: Visions of Critique
  • Chapter 1: “After Humanism?”—Time and Transformation in Critical Thinking
    • Critical Conundrum
    • After Human(ism)
    • Re-Turning
    • Hope at the End of the World as “We” Know It?
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 2: The Most Difficult Task: On the Idea of an Impure Pure Nonviolence in Derrida
    • The Logic of the Gift in Given Time
    • The Impure Pure Gift: Counterfeit Money
    • The Most Difficult Task
    • On the Death Penalty
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 3: The Changeability of the World: Utopia and Critique
    • *
    • *
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 4: Seeking Intelligent Life in the Time of COVID-19, or, Thinking “Epicritically”: (For Stan Robinson)
    • Whose Limits?
    • This Strange Critical Entity
    • New Logi(isti)cs of Critique
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Part II: Critical Reading
  • Chapter 5: Suspicious Minds: Critique as Symptomatic Reading
    • ***
    • From Reading Symptoms to Uncritical Description
    • Derrida and Wynter: From Rereading to Rewriting
    • ***
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 6: The Ends of Critical Intimacy: Spivak, Fanon, and Appropriative Reading
    • Refrain from Appropriation. Reading as Aesthetic Education
    • ***
      • Appropriative Reading: Spivak Reading Fanon Reading Hegel
    • Thwarting Governing Fictions
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 7: Critical Vivisection: Transforming Ethical Sensibilities
    • Vivisection, Literal and Metaphorical
    • A Novel Experiment
    • Engaging with Ethical Sensibility
    • The Ends of Critique
    • Bibliography
  • Part III: Institutions and Technologies
  • Chapter 8: Unwinding the Abstraction of Whiteness
    • ***
    • An Origin Story
    • An Early Twentieth-Century American Cautionary Tale
    • Worshipping “Dog”
    • From “God” to “Dog”
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 9: How Not to Be Governed Like That by Our Digital Technologies
    • ***
    • “Like That and at That Cost”
    • “To Be Governed”
    • “By Our Digital Technologies”
    • “Not”
    • “How”
    • Uncomfortable Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 10: Defective Institutions: or, Critique
    • ***
    • From Critical Act to Political Substance?
    • A Brief for Falsification
    • A Brief for Failures
    • The Operator of Defection
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Contributors

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