•  27
    Foreign Bodies
    Routledge. 1994.
    Foreign Bodies analyzes how our culture elaborates for us the bodies we have by natural evolution. Calling on the new means contemporary thinkers have used to understand the body, Alphonso Lingis explores forms of power, pleasure and pain, and libidinal identity. The book contrasts the findings of theory with the practice of the body as formulated in quite different kinds of language--the language of plastic art (the artwork body builders make of themselves), biography, anthropology and literatu…Read more
  •  63
  • The Pleasure in Postcards
    In Hugh J. Silverman & Don Ihde (eds.), Hermeneutics and Deconstruction, State University of New York Press. pp. 152--64. 1985.
  •  92
    Oedipus rex: The oedipus rule and its subversion
    Human Studies 7 (1): 91-100. 1984.
  • The Language of "The Gay Science"
    Analecta Husserliana 12 (n/a): 313. 1982.
  •  68
    Violence and Splendor
    Northwestern University Press. 2011.
    Part 1. Spaces within spaces -- 1. Extremes -- 2. Nature abhors a vacuum -- 3. Space travel -- 4. Learn to say -- 5. Metaphysical habitats -- 6. Departures -- 7. Plumage and talismans -- 8. Inner space -- Part 2. Snares for the eyes -- 9. The fallen giant -- 10. The stone -- 11. The voices of things -- 12. Nature and art -- 13. Nature -- 14. In touch -- Part. 3. The sacred -- 15. Sacrilege -- Part 4. Violence -- 16. Material culture -- 17. Orders -- 18. Filth -- 19. Fake fetishes, disrobed mann…Read more
  •  75
    Libido: The French Existential Theories
    Indiana University Press. 1985.
    Alphonso Lingis's engaging book studies the phenomenological and postphenomenological theories of sexuality of six contemporary French philosophers: Jean-Paul Sartre, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-François Lyotard, Gilles ...
  •  32
    The first person singular
    Northwestern University Press. 2007.
    Alphonso Lingis’s singular works of philosophy are not so much written as performed, and in The First Person Singular the performance is characteristically brilliant, a consummate act of philosophical reckoning. Lingis’s subject here, aptly enough, is the subject itself, understood not as consciousness but as embodied, impassioned, active being. His book is, at the same time, an elegant cultural analysis of how subjectivity is differently and collectively understood, invested, and situated. The …Read more
  •  76
    Cues, Watchwords, Passwords
    International Studies in Philosophy 36 (4): 49-64. 2004.
  •  116
    Intentional Libido, Impulsive Libido
    Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 12 (1): 51-62. 1981.
  •  31
    The Dreadful Mystic Banquet
    Janus Head 3 (2): 192-212. 2000.
  •  36
    Book review: Abuses (review)
    Philosophy and Literature 20 (2). 1996.