The Limits of Death: Between Philosophy and PsychoanalysisJoanne Morra, Mark Robson, Marquard Smith Manchester University Press, 2000 - 254 pages This is the first ever book to analyse outsourcing - contracting out public services to private business interests. It is an unacknowledged revolution in the British economy, and it has happened quietly, but it is creating powerful new corporate interests, transforming the organisation of government at all levels, and is simultaneously enriching a new business elite and creating numerous fiascos in the delivery of public services. What links the brutal treatment of asylum-seeking detainees, the disciplining of welfare benefit claimants, the profits effortlessly earned by the privatised rail companies, and the fiasco of the management of security at the 2012 Olympics? In a word: outsourcing. This book, by the renowned research team at the Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change in Manchester, is the first to combine 'follow the money' research with accessibility for the engaged citizen, and the first to balance critique with practical suggestions for policy reform. |
Table des matières
To die laughing | 3 |
The impossibility of Levinass death | 22 |
the thirteen stations | 40 |
Dead time a ghost story | 57 |
Deaths incessant motion | 79 |
Freuds metapsychology of the drives | 106 |
sex death and Wagnerian androgyny | 130 |
The last hours | 144 |
Execution and fiction | 167 |
translating my father | 198 |
Deadly tales | 220 |
To be announced | 234 |
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aesthetic Androgyne anxiety Aporias Barthes Bataille Beckett's become biopsychic development biopsychic organism blood body calls Camera Lucida Catherine concept corporate crime criminal culture dead death drive death penalty Derrida desire differentiated Dionysian dream dying erotic ethical event excitation execution experience external supports fact feeling feminine fiction finitude Freud Genet Georges Bataille ghosts ghostwriting Harmondsworth haunted Hegel Heidegger human biopsychic human sexual impossibility Jesus knowledge laughter Levinas Levinas's living organism London loss machine meaning modern mort mortality mother mourning murder mutability narrative Nattiez never Niccolo Nietzsche nihilism object oneself opera Penguin perhaps Phenomenology philosophy photograph play pleasure principle possibility psychoanalysis psychocortical question Ralegh relation Roland Barthes sense sexual drives speak spectral Stelarc story suicide symbolic telepathy temporality theory thing thought tion trans traumatic Tristan und Isolde un-knowing University Press victim victim's family Virilio Wagner Walter Benjamin words writing