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  1. The Dedramatization of Violence in Claire Denis's I Can't Sleep.Nikolaj Lübecker - 2007 - Paragraph 30 (2):17-33.
    Throughout the twentieth century a significant tradition in French thought promoted a highly dramatized reading of the Hegelian struggle for recognition. In this tradition a violent struggle was regarded as an indispensable means to the realization of both individual and social ideals. The following article considers Claire Denis's film I Can't Sleep as an oblique challenge to this tradition. I Can't Sleep performs a careful dedramatization of an extremely violent story and thereby points to the possibility of an alternative form (...)
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  2. Sartre's Silence<BR> Limits of Recognition in Why Write?Nikolaj Lübecker - 2008 - Sartre Studies International 14 (1):42-57.
    The article examines the conjunction of writing and the Hegelian theory of recognition as it appears in Jean-Paul Sartre's text "Why Write?" The author argues that Sartre's theory of literature is not only a theory of literature as conversation and communication, but also a theory about the relation to a certain silence, and since literature and recognition go together in Sartre's text, the presence of silence has consequences for his theory of recognition.
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    Landscape memories: Akerman’s sud and the “spectator-environment”.Nikolaj Lübecker - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (6):41-56.
    Chantal Akerman’s documentary Sud [South, 1999] investigates the brutal racist murder of James Byrd Jr that took place in Jasper, Texas in 1998. Sud is a socio-political documentary, but it...
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    Mallarmé’s Digital Demon.Nikolaj Lübecker - 2020 - Paragraph 43 (2):140-158.
    How do Mallarmé’s writings speak to the present? To answer this question, this article establishes a dialogue between one of Mallarmé’s early prose poems, ‘Le Démon de l'analogie’, and texts by the...
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    Sartre's Silence Limits of Recognition in Why Write?Nikolaj Lübecker - 2008 - Sartre Studies International 14:42-57.
    This paper examines Sartre's conception of (Hegelian) recognition. This conception is often described as 'dialogical', likened to a conversation. However, if we consider Sartre's analysis of the relation between writer and reader in Why Write?, it becomes apparent that three elements are involved: the writer, the reader, and a 'silence' which precedes (and follows) the interaction between writer and reader. The paper probes the meaning and function of this silence, examining what Sartre's idea of recognition owes to the aesthetic experience.
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  6. The Politics of ImagesGeorges Didi-Huberman:Quand les images prennent position. L’Œil de l'histoire, I, 271 pp.Judith Butler:Frames of War. When Is Life Grievable?, 194 pp. [REVIEW]Nikolaj Lübecker - 2013 - Paragraph 36 (3):392-407.
    The last ten to fifteen years have seen the publication of numerous books and articles considering the relation between images and politics. The reasons for this development are obvious: footage of the World Trade Center attacks and photos from Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo (to give just a few examples) have clearly demonstrated that images not only respond to political events, but also play an important part in shaping them. Images have therefore been blamed for their complicity in these events (in (...)
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