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Köp båda 2 för 535 krRanging from literature and the visual arts to psychoanalysis, religion, the question of women, and politics, the essays gathered in this volume deal with the experience of time in birth and rebirth, with the time of events and emergencies and, no less, with the existential dimension of time as opposed to what technologies of sensation are programmed to make of it. In her inimitable and provocative signature style, Kristeva graces her readers with brilliant readings of texts, paintings, sculptures, artists, and political events. Passions of Our Time is an excellent book. -- Verena Conley, Harvard University The essays and interviews in Passions of Our Time not only thoughtfully extend and develop some of Kristeva's seminal ideas but also brilliantly address pressing contemporary issues, such as changing notions of motherhood, fatherhood, disability, and sexuality, and powerfully demonstrate that psychoanalysis is still relevant today. This volume makes it clear why Julia Kristeva is one of the most important cultural critics of our time. -- Kelly Oliver, author of <i>Reading Kristeva: Unraveling the Double-Bind</i> Kristeva's scope is both international and cross-cultural, reaching as far as China, and as close to Western experiences as suburbia's socioeconomic decline. * Library Journal * Amazingly multifaceted. . . . Kristeva marks a new baseline for understanding in the humanities. * The European Legacy *
Julia Kristeva is professor emerita of linguistics at the Universit de Paris VII and author of many acclaimed works. Her Columbia University Press books include Hatred and Forgiveness (2012); The Severed Head: Capital Visions (2014); and, with Philippe Sollers, Marriage as a Fine Art (2016). Lawrence D. Kritzman is Pat and John Rosenwald Research Professor in the Arts and Sciences and professor of French and comparative literature at Dartmouth College. He is the author of The Fabulous Imagination: On Montaignes Essays (2012) and editor of the Columbia History of Twentieth-Century French Thought (2006) and the Columbia University Press series European Perspectives. Constance Borde and Sheila Malovany-Chevallier live and work in Paris, France. They are the translators of The Second Sex, by Simone de Beauvoir.
Foreword, by Lawrence D. Kritzman Acknowledgments I. Singular Liberties 1. My Alphabet; or, How I Am a Letter 2. Reliance: What Is Loving for a Mother? 3. How to Speak to Literature with Roland Barthes 4. Emile Benveniste, a Linguist Who Neither Says nor Hides, but Signifies II. Psychoanalysis 5. Freud, the Heart of the Matter 6. The Contemporary Contribution of Psychoanalysis 7. A Father Is Being Beaten to Death 8. Maternal Eroticism 9. Speaking in Psychoanalysis: From Symbols to Flesh and Back Again 10. Affect, That Intense Depth of Words 11. The Lacan Event III. Women 12. Antigone, Limit and Horizon 13. The Passion According to Teresa of Avila 14. Beauvoir Dreams IV. Humanism 15. A Felicity Named Rousseau 16. Speech, That Experience 17. Disability Revised: The Tragic and Chance 18. From Critical Modernity to Analytical Modernity 19. In Jerusalem: Monotheisms and Secularization and the Need to Believe 20. Dare Humanism 21. Ten Principles for Twenty-First-Century Humanism 22. On the Sanctity of Human Life V. France, Europe, China 23. Moses, Freud, and China 24. Diversity Is My Motto 25. The French Cultural Message VI. Positions 26. The Universal in the Singular 27. Can One Be a Muslim Woman and a Shrink? 28. One Is Born Woman, but I Become One Notes Index