The Dancing Woman Is the Woman Who Dances into the Future: Rancière, Dance, Politics

Philosophy and Rhetoric 49 (4):482-499 (2016)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

The dancer is not a woman dancing, for these juxtaposed reasons; that is not a woman, but a metaphor summing up one of the elementary aspects of our form: knife, goblet, flower etc., and that she is not dancing, but suggesting through the miracle of bends and leaps, a kind of corporal writing, what it would take pages of prose, dialogue and description to express. In this article I examine the problematic position Jacques Rancière holds in his political philosophy with regard to ontology. Rancière famously sees politics as the redistribution of the sensible, as a moment in which those who have no part in the body politic, who are not defined as speaking beings, intervene and make themselves counted and...

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 92,323

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Jacques Rancière and the problem of pure politics.Samuel A. Chambers - 2011 - European Journal of Political Theory 10 (3):303-326.
Gender sceptics and feminist politics.Mari Mikkola - 2007 - Res Publica 13 (4):361-380.
Sensibility and the Law: On Rancière's Reading of Lyotard.Peter Milne - 2011 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 15 (2):95-119.
Translating Politics.Samuel Chambers - 2016 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 49 (4):524-548.
Rancière's leftism, or politics and its discontents.Bruno Bosteels - 2009 - In Gabriel Rockhill & Philip Watts (eds.), Jacques Rancière: History, Politics, Aesthetics. Duke University Press.
Aquinas on the Inferiority of Woman.Francisco J. Romero Carrasquillo & Hilaire K. Troyer de Romero - 2013 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 87 (4):685-710.

Analytics

Added to PP
2016-11-17

Downloads
41 (#390,688)

6 months
13 (#200,867)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

Add more references