| Kamala Visweswaran - 1994 - 224 str.
...seeks in the consolidation and concealment of authority. To deconstruct is not to negate or dismiss, but to call into question and. perhaps most importantly,...like the subject, to a reusage or redeployment that has previously not been authorized.31 It is thus possible to see the agency of Janaki ithe central... | |
| Steven Seidman - 1994 - 324 str.
...deconstruct is not to negate or to dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most important, to open up a term, like "the subject," to a reusage...redeployment that previously has not been authorized. Within feminism, it seems as if there is some political necessity to speak as for women, and I would... | |
| Steve Pile, N. J. Thrift - 1995 - 432 str.
...power/knowledge by redefining subjectivity; as Butler argues, 'to deconstruct is not to negate or dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly,...redeployment that previously has not been authorized' (Butler 1992: 15). As well as being the result of political struggles, then, this feminist notion of... | |
| Seyla Benhabib - 1995 - 190 str.
...serves in the consolidation and concealment of authority. To deconstruct is not to negate or to dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly,...redeployment that previously has not been authorized. Within feminism, it seems as if there is some political necessity to speak as and for women, and I... | |
| Steven Kepnes - 1996 - 412 str.
...functions it serves in the consolidation of authority. To deconstruct is not to negate or dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly,...redeployment that previously has not been authorized. (Butler 1992, 15) Events such as the Holocaust, the establishment of the State of Israel, the emergence... | |
| J. Victor Koschmann - 1996 - 318 str.
...serves in the consolidation and concealment of authority. To deconstruct is not to negate or to dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly,...reusage or redeployment that previously has not been authorized.13 In short, the question of subjectivity and, more broadly, of agency can hardly be sidestepped... | |
| Eric O. Clarke - 2000 - 254 str.
...defends poststructuralist critique, Butler argues that " [t]o deconstruct is not to negate or to dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly,...redeployment that previously has not been authorized" ("Contingent Foundations" 15). These are useful formulations. I would suggest, however, that the moment... | |
| Darlene Juschka - 2001 - 718 str.
...serves in the consolidation and concealment of authority. To deconstruct is not to negate or to dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly,...redeployment that previously has not been authorized. Within feminism, it seems as if there is some political necessity to speak as and for women, and I... | |
| Peter Alldridge, Chrisje H. Brants - 2001 - 301 str.
...commitments to that to which the term [refers] . . . To deconstruct is not to negate or to dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly, to open up a term ... to a reusage or redeployment that previously has not been authorized". J. Butler, "Contingent Foundations:... | |
| Caroline Ramazanoglu, Janet Holland - 2002 - 208 str.
...serves in the consolidation and concealment of authority- To deconstruct is not to negate or dismiss, but to call into question and, perhaps most importantly,...that previously has not been authorized. (1992: 15) Questioning the authority of feminists to speak as subjects with specialist knowledge of gender relations... | |
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