Slavoj Žižek
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Slavoj Žižek is a person.
References
2015
- "The 'debate of the century': what happened when Jordan Peterson debated Slavoj Žižek"
- QUOTE: ... Žižek didn’t really address the matter at hand, either, preferring to relish his enmities. Most of the attacks on me are from left-liberals,” he began, hoping that “they would be turning in their graves even if they were still alive”. His remarks were just as rambling as Peterson’s, veering from Trump and Sanders to Dostoevsky to the refugee crisis to the aesthetics of Nazism. If Peterson was an ill-prepared prof, Žižek was a columnist stitching together a bunch of 1,000-worders. He too finished his remarks with a critique of political correctness, which he described as the world of impotence that masks pure defeat.
The great surprise of this debate turned out to be how much in common the old-school Marxist and the Canadian identity politics refusenik had.
One hated communism. The other hated communism but thought that capitalism possessed inherent contradictions. The first one agreed that capitalism possessed inherent contradictions. And that was basically it. They both wanted the same thing: capitalism with regulation, which is what every sane person wants.
- QUOTE: ... Žižek didn’t really address the matter at hand, either, preferring to relish his enmities. Most of the attacks on me are from left-liberals,” he began, hoping that “they would be turning in their graves even if they were still alive”. His remarks were just as rambling as Peterson’s, veering from Trump and Sanders to Dostoevsky to the refugee crisis to the aesthetics of Nazism. If Peterson was an ill-prepared prof, Žižek was a columnist stitching together a bunch of 1,000-worders. He too finished his remarks with a critique of political correctness, which he described as the world of impotence that masks pure defeat.
2015
- (Wikipedia, 2015) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavoj_Žižek Retrieved:2015-3-22.
- Slavoj Žižek (born 21 March 1949) is a Slovenian Marxist philosopher and cultural critic. He is currently a senior researcher at the Institute for Sociology and Philosophy, University of Ljubljana in Slovenia, Global Distinguished Professor of German at New York University, and international director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities. [1] He writes widely on a diverse range of topics, including political theory, film theory, cultural studies, theology, and psychoanalysis. Žižek achieved international recognition as a social theorist after the 1989 publication of his first book in English, The Sublime Object of Ideology, which disputed a Marxist interpretation of ideology as false consciousness and argued for ideology as an unconscious fantasy that structures reality. Žižek considers himself a political radical and critic of neoliberalism. His political thought represents one of two paths of a progressive alternative — either a return to the program of socialism, which Žižek and Alain Badiou advocate, or the proposal of an alternative vision of social arrangements, which is taken up by contemporaries such as Roberto Mangabeira Unger.[2] [3] His unorthodox style, frequent newspaper op-eds, and popular academic books have gained Žižek a wide following and international influence. He has been labelled by some the “Elvis of cultural theory" and Foreign Policy listed him on its 2012 list of Top 100 Global Thinkers, calling him "a celebrity philosopher."[4] Žižek's work was chronicled in a 2005 documentary film entitled Zizek! A scholarly journal, the International Journal of Žižek Studies, was also founded to engage his work. [5]
- ↑ http://www.bbk.ac.uk/bih/aboutus/staff/zizek
- ↑ Skof, Lenart (2010): "On Progressive Alternative: Unger Versus Žižek", Synthesis Philosophica 49.
- ↑ MacNeil, William (1999): "Taking Rights Symptomatically — Jouissance, Coupure, Objet Petit a.", Griffith Law Review 8.
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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tag; no text was provided for refs namedThe FP Top 100 Global Thinkers
- ↑ http://zizekstudies.org/index.php/ijzs/about
1989
- (Žižek, 1989) ⇒ Slavoj Žižek. (1989). “The Sublime Object of Ideology." Verso Books,