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Revolt, Affect, Collectivity

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Explores how the concept of revolution permeates and unifies Kristeva's body of work.These original essays explore how the concept of revolution permeates and unifies Julia Kristeva's body of work ...
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  • 22 September 2005
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Explores how the concept of revolution permeates and unifies Kristeva's body of work.

These original essays explore how the concept of revolution permeates and unifies Julia Kristeva's body of work by tracing its trajectory from her early engagement with the Tel Quel group, through her preoccupation in the 1980s with abjection, melancholia, and love, to her latest work. Some of the leading voices in Kristeva scholarship examine her reevaluation of the concept of revolt in the context of the changing cultural and political conditions in the West; the questions of the stranger, race, and nation; her reflections on narrative, public spaces, and collectivity in the context of her engagement with Hannah Arendt's work; her development and refinement of the notions of abjection, melancholia, and narcissism in her ongoing interrogation of aesthetics; as well as her contribution to film theory. Focused primarily on Kristeva's newest work-much of it only recently translated into English-this book breaks new ground in Kristeva scholarship.

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Price: £25.50
Pages: 223
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Gender Theory
Publication Date: 22 September 2005
ISBN: 9780791465684
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

INTRODUCTION:
Tina Chanter and Ewa Płonowska Ziarek


I. FEMININITY, RACE, AND REVOLT


1. Julia Kristeva and the Revolutionary Politics of Tel Quel
Joan Brandt


2. From Revolution to Revolt Culture
Sara Beardsworth


3. Kristeva and Fanon: Revolutionary Violence and Ironic Articulation
Ewa Płonowska Ziarek


4. Revolt and Forgiveness
Kelly Oliver


II. AFFECT, COMMUNITY, POLITICS


5. The Skin of the Community: Affect and Boundary Formation
Sara Ahmed


6. Bearing Witness in the Polis: Kristeva, Arendt, and the Space of Appearance
Noëlle McAfee


7. Political Affections: Kristeva and Arendt on Violence and Gratitude
Peg Birmingham


III. ABJECTION, FILM, AND MELANCHOLIA


8. The Exoticization and Universalization of the Fetish, and the Naturalization of the Phallus: Abject Objections
Tina Chanter


9. On the Border between Abjection and the Third: The (Re)Birth of Narcissus in the Works of Julia Kristeva
Pleshette DeArmitt


10. Black and Blue: Kieslowski's Melancholia
Frances L. Restuccia


Contributors
Index