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William Egginton has written 8 work(s)
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Cover for 9781408843840 Cover for 9781620401750 Cover for 9781620401774 Cover for 9780231148788 Cover for 9780231148795 Cover for 9781408843857 Cover for 9780804769549 Cover for 9780804755993 Cover for 9780804756006 Cover for 9780804752589 Cover for 9780804752596 Cover for 9780791460696 Cover for 9780791460702 Cover for 9780791455456 Cover for 9780791455463
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Hardcover:

9781408843840 | Bloomsbury Pub Ltd, February 25, 2016, cover price $39.25
9781620401750 | Bloomsbury Pub Plc USA, February 2, 2016, cover price $27.00

Paperback:

9781620401774 | Bloomsbury Pub Plc USA, January 10, 2017, cover price $17.00

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Hardcover:

9780231148788 | Columbia Univ Pr, June 7, 2011, cover price $35.00

Paperback:

9780231148795 | Columbia Univ Pr, June 7, 2016, cover price $26.00

cover image for 9781408843857
Product Description: In the early seventeenth century, a crippled, graying, almost toothless veteran of Spain's wars against the Ottoman Empire published a book. It was the story of a poor nobleman, his brain addled from reading too many books of chivalry, who deludes himself that he is a knight errant and sets off on hilarious adventures...read more

Paperback:

9781408843857 | Gardners Books, March 10, 2016, cover price $15.10 | About this edition: In the early seventeenth century, a crippled, graying, almost toothless veteran of Spain's wars against the Ottoman Empire published a book.

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Product Description: The Theater of Truth argues that seventeenth-century baroque and twentieth-century neobaroque aesthetics have to be understood as part of the same complex. The Neobaroque, rather than being a return to the stylistic practices of a particular time and place, should be described as the continuation of a cultural strategy produced as a response to a specific problem of thought that has beset Europe and the colonial world since early modernity...read more

Hardcover:

9780804769549, titled "The Theater of Truth: The Ideology of (Neo)Baroque Aesthetics" | Stanford Univ Pr, December 17, 2009, cover price $57.50 | About this edition: The Theater of Truth argues that seventeenth-century baroque and twentieth-century neobaroque aesthetics have to be understood as part of the same complex.

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Product Description: This book is about interpretation as it pertains to literature, philosophy, and psychoanalysis. It argues against certain trends of thought that claim we should do without interpretation by demonstrating that interpretation, as described by psychoanalysis, is already a fundamental aspect of all human experience...read more

Hardcover:

9780804755993, titled "The Philosopher's Desire: Psychoanalysis, Interpretation, and Truth" | Stanford Univ Pr, May 31, 2007, cover price $55.00 | About this edition: This book is about interpretation as it pertains to literature, philosophy, and psychoanalysis.

Paperback:

9780804756006, titled "The Philosopher's Desire: Psychoanalysis, Interpretation, and Truth" | Stanford Univ Pr, May 31, 2007, cover price $19.95 | About this edition: This book is about interpretation as it pertains to literature, philosophy, and psychoanalysis.

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William Egginton argues that the notion of the ethical cannot be understood outside of its relation to perversity―that is, the impulse to do what one knows and feels is wrong. The allure of the perverse, moreover, should not be understood as merely the necessary obverse of ethically motivated behavior; rather, from the perspective of a psychoanalytic understanding of the ethical, the two drives are structurally identical. This discovery leads the author to engagements with deconstructive thought and with contemporary gender theory. In the first, he shows that the insistent resurgence of the ethical fault-line inevitably drives even the most stalwart atheism to a theological moment. In the second, he argues that while “female philosophy” has successfully repudiated the subject-centered exceptionalism of “male philosophy,” it is precisely to the extent that it is understood to offer a kind of release from the perversity of ethics that it must fail as ethical utterances.

Hardcover:

9780804752589 | 1 edition (Stanford Univ Pr, December 16, 2005), cover price $63.00

Paperback:

9780804752596 | 1 edition (Stanford Univ Pr, December 16, 2005), cover price $25.95 | About this edition: William Egginton argues that the notion of the ethical cannot be understood outside of its relation to perversity―that is, the impulse to do what one knows and feels is wrong.

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Product Description: The Pragmatic Turn in Philosophy explores how the various discursive strategies of old and new pragmatisms are related, and what their pertinence is to the relationship between pragmatism and philosophy as a whole. The contributors bridge the divide between analytic and continental philosophy through a transcontinental desire to work on common problems in a common philosophical language...read more
By William Egginton (editor) and Mike Sandbothe (editor)

Hardcover:

9780791460696 | State Univ of New York Pr, April 1, 2004, cover price $55.00 | About this edition: The Pragmatic Turn in Philosophy explores how the various discursive strategies of old and new pragmatisms are related, and what their pertinence is to the relationship between pragmatism and philosophy as a whole.

Paperback:

9780791460702 | State Univ of New York Pr, July 1, 2004, cover price $31.95 | About this edition: The Pragmatic Turn in Philosophy explores how the various discursive strategies of old and new pragmatisms are related, and what their pertinence is to the relationship between pragmatism and philosophy as a whole.

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What is special, distinct, modern about modernity? In How the World Became a Stage, William Egginton argues that the experience of modernity is fundamentally spatial rather than subjective and proposes replacing the vocabulary of subjectivity with the concepts of presence and theatricality. Following a Heideggerian injunctive to search for the roots of epochal change not in philosophies so much as in basic skills and practices, he describes the spatiality of modernity on the basis of a close historical analysis of the practices of spectacle from the late Middle Ages to the early modern period, paying particular attention to stage practices in France and Spain. He recounts how the space in which the world is disclosed changed from the full, magically charged space of presence to the empty, fungible, and theatrical space of the stage.

Hardcover:

9780791455456 | State Univ of New York Pr, October 1, 2002, cover price $65.50 | About this edition: What is special, distinct, modern about modernity?

Paperback:

9780791455463 | State Univ of New York Pr, November 1, 2002, cover price $31.95

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