Browsing Open Research by Author "O'Connor, M"
Now showing items 1-6 of 6
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Between time: given futures across Derrida and Deleuze
O'Connor, M (AUT University, 2009)It is not common to find significance across the thought of Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuze although there have been moments where some have sought to locate such lines of flight. One such line has been located in the ... -
Detours and disasters, signing the city otherwise: posed solitude, a poetics of community
O'Connor, M (The International Association for Philosophy and Literature, 2008)In the path of Maurice Blanchot’s thinking comprehension can lead to disaster. What is it to not comprehend? Where would this lead us? In the first instance, no doubt to a kind of disaster zone as a site of nostalgia, of ... -
Disagreement does not take place: on Blanchot's site of contestation
O'Connor, M (AUT University, 2006)This seminar engages with an outside to representation via Maurice Blanchot's notion of le neutre; "this non-power that would not be a simple negation of power" - but the suspension of the dialectical economy. Further, one ... -
Perennially homeless: deconstruction—a disciplined non-belonging
O'Connor, M (AUT University, 2008)In the context of the academy today, what is it to say that we belong in a perennial condition of translation? That is, a translation process across, and of course internal to, the borders of [its] disciplinary borders? ... -
Provocative coincidences: the question as style's dissimulating face - writing beyond the aporias of the subject
O'Connor, M (AUT University, 2006)Jacques Derrida’s text, Spurs: The Styles of Nietzsche is an interrogation of aspects of Nietzsche’s writings in reference to the question of “Woman.” And, we should not forget the complexity of engagements with quotation ... -
Theories of practice: an ethics of film analysis
O'Connor, M (Centre for Lacanian Analysis, 2009)With film theory the “text” that is film has at times encountered diverse readings that account for potential relations to and of the subject. Marxism, feminism, formalism, structuralism, phenomenology and psychoanalysis ...