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Bradley Kaye

Niagara University
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  •  Publications
    8
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 More details
  • Niagara University
    Department of Philosophy
    Other (Part-time)
State University of New York at Binghamton
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2010
Areas of Specialization
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy of Literature
Continental Philosophy
Existentialism
Critical Theory
Continental Psychoanalysis
Social and Political Philosophy
2 more
Areas of Interest
Asian Philosophy
Continental Psychoanalysis
Critical Theory
Existentialism
Philosophy of Literature
History of Western Philosophy
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy
Meta-Ethics
Metaphysics
Social and Political Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
6 more
  • All publications (8)
  •  37
    Critical Madness Theory: A Way of Understanding Irrational Behavior as Political Action
    Edwin Mellen Press. 2013.
    Discusses how social justice for the mad can be accomplished without stigmatization and marginalization. This title offers theories of continental European thought and answers the questions of how there can be political action in a postmodern era.
    Judith ButlerGilles DeleuzeContinental PsychoanalysisMichel FoucaultDeleuze and Guattari: Rhizome
  • Politics, an Illusion We Have Forgotten is Such
    Fast Capitalism 9 (1). 2011.
    Nietzsche: Truth
  •  33
    "What About Life?" What Starts as Contingency is Understood Retroactively as Necessary
    International Journal of Žižek Studies 14 (1). 2020.
    There is an emphasis on the politics of ‘life’ through the lens of ‘marginalization’ and the giving and taking away of life with the solution being reducible to Said’s understanding of the marginalized making a “voyage in” from the periphery to reclaiming the center. While clearly these are useful political questions, they reach an impasse, which Zizek’s work while is in favor of immigration and open borders, correctly raises some anxieties about the politics of life from a completely different …Read more
    There is an emphasis on the politics of ‘life’ through the lens of ‘marginalization’ and the giving and taking away of life with the solution being reducible to Said’s understanding of the marginalized making a “voyage in” from the periphery to reclaiming the center. While clearly these are useful political questions, they reach an impasse, which Zizek’s work while is in favor of immigration and open borders, correctly raises some anxieties about the politics of life from a completely different perspective. This is what I want to explore in this paper, what does Zizek’s work make possible in thinking beyond the ideological way that the ‘politics of life’ has been framed, thus opening up discourses that have been ‘set’ by a limited ‘post/de-colonial-biopolitical’ set of signifiers, which to my reading of Zizek, he is right to point out, have become the ‘master’-signifiers in the ideological matrices of how the question of life is currently framed.
    Slavoj Zizek
  •  127
    Félix Guattari (2011) The Machinic Unconscious: Essays in Schizoanalysis, trans. T. Adkins, Los Angeles: Semiotext
    Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 8 (2): 307-310. 2014.
    Gilles DeleuzeDeleuze and Guattari: RhizomeGuattari: Schizoanalytic Cartographies
  • Foucault, Psychology and the Analytics of Power (review)
    Foucault Studies 166-168. 2010.
    Michel Foucault
  •  171
    Cressida J. Heyes , Self-Transformations: Foucault, Ethics, and Normalized Bodies (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007) ISBN: 0195310543
    Foucault Studies 88-90. 2009.
    Michel Foucault
  •  146
    Derek Hook , Foucault, Psychology and the Analytics of Power (Houndsmill, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), ISBN: 978-0230008199 (review)
    Foucault Studies 8 166-168. 2010.
    Michel Foucault
  •  7
    Dreams, Madness, and Hallucinating History with Jean Baudrillard
    International Journal of Baudrillard Studies 9 (3): 3. 2012.
    PoststructuralismFrench Philosophy
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