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Inoperative community

By: Nancy, Jean-Luc.
Contributor(s): Connor, Peter [ed. & tr.] | Garbus, Lisa [tr.] | Holland, Michael [tr.] | Sawhney, Simona [tr.].
Series: Theory and history of literature ; v.76.Publisher: Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 1991Description: xli, 176 p. ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9780816619245.Subject(s): Community | Political philosophy | Political participation | Arendt,Hannah | Death | Freud,Sigmund | Hellenism | Humanity | Judaism | Heidegger,Martin | Myth | Plato | Religion | Singularity | Totalitarianism | Voice | WritingDDC classification: 307 Summary: In this powerful work, Jean-Luc Nancy examines community as an idea that has dominated modern thought and traces its relation to concepts of experience, discourse, and the individual. Contrary to popular Western notions of community, Nancy shows that it is neither a project of fusion nor production. Rather, he argues, community can be defined through the political nature of its resistance against immanent power.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
Translated from the Italian.

In this powerful work, Jean-Luc Nancy examines community as an idea that has dominated modern thought and traces its relation to concepts of experience, discourse, and the individual. Contrary to popular Western notions of community, Nancy shows that it is neither a project of fusion nor production. Rather, he argues, community can be defined through the political nature of its resistance against immanent power.

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