Learn More About This
Directory
This directory sponsored by SIQL, a Spider Makers company...
1. ¬d¸ß: abjection - ½u¤W^º~¦r¨å (English-Chinese Dictionary)
- cdict.giga.net.tw
- ³Ìªñ¤QÓ¬d¸ßªº³æ¦r¬°: instant, Terminal, Aven, generate, aquamarine, interest, Otway, hospital, PS2, wrench ¦@µo²{ 7 µ§Ãö©ó abjection ªº¸ê®Æ (¸ÑÄÀ¤º¤å¤§^¤å³æ¦r§¡¥i¦AÂI¿ï¶i¤J¬d¸ß).
- ¸ê®Æ¨Ó·½(1): pydict data pydict abjection ¨õ»À,¸¨¾z ¸ê®Æ¨Ó·½(2): Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) web1913 Abjection \Ab*jec"tion\, n. ... abjection, L. ... ``The abjection of the king and his realm. ... That this should be termed baseness, abjection of mind, or servility, is it credible? --Hooker. ... 0 wn abjection n : a low or downcast state; "each confession brought her into an attitude of abasement"- H. ... Menchken syn: {abasement}, {degradation} ¸ê®Æ¨Ó·½(4): Internet Dictionary Project english-french abjection abjection(f) Noun ¸ê®Æ¨Ó·½(5): Internet Dictionary Project english-italian abjection abiezione ¸ê®Æ¨Ó·½(6): Internet Dictionary Project english-portugue abjection abjecc,a~o Noun ¸ê®Æ¨Ó·½(7): Internet Dictionary Project english-spanish abjection abyección CDICT v2. ...
2. Absent Mothers and Orphaned Fathers: Narcissism and Abjection in Lessing's Aesthetic and Dramatic Production (Kritik : German Literary Theory and Cu)
- enotalone.com
- Absent Mothers and Orphaned Fathers: Narcissism and Abjection in Lessing's Aesthetic and Dramatic Production (Kritik : German Literary Theory and Cu).
3. Records for Abjection, melancholia, and love : the work of Julia Kristeva. (in MARION)
- js-catalog.cpl.org
- Abjection, melancholia, and love : the work of Julia Kristeva.
- Abjection, melancholia, and love : the work of Julia Kristeva / edited by John Fletcher and Andrew Benjamin.
4. Cultural Abjection, an unpublished essay by the artist Alexis Hunter , 2003.
- www.alexishunter.co.uk
- Artist's Essays Home Cultural Abjection .
- When a culture has to analyse itself though the intervention of other cultures, as in a period of colonisation, it seems to go through a period of introspection and abjection. Abjection in this context: self -disgust, self-analysis, a wish to deny original cultural symbols, a breakdown of hierarchy and disrespect for old icons and customs. ...
- This abjection has affected the Maori in the past, and the return to their natural pride and self-respect has taken a generation span. I feel that English Culture too, is going through a period of cultural abjection as it loses control of its borders and identity and evolves into a multicultural society. ...
- The visceral oil paintings of the Jewish artist Soutine, who painted images of the glistening bloody carcasses in the abattoirs of France, exemplify the drama of abjection in a work of art, and influenced my 1990 Culture of Consumption Series. ... What they seem to be, a traditional still life, is subverted by the tensions of the underlying concept of abjection.
- The link between the Culture of Consumption Series and the Hawaiki Series is the understanding of abjection – through eating an enemy you show disrespect through the consumption of his body, you destroy his mana, power within his social hierarchy: cultural change through consumption. ...
5. Abjection and Its Correction in Ethnographic Studies
- www.booksbytesandbeyond.com
- Abjection and Its Correction in Ethnographic Studies .
- Abjection and Its Correction in Ethnographic Studies.
- Abjection and Its Correction in Ethnographic Studies.
6. Stand-Up Comedy in Theory, Or, Abjection in America (New Americanists)
- www.enotalone.com
- Stand-Up Comedy in Theory, Or, Abjection in America (New Americanists).
7. Kristevas theory of abjection
- dks.thing.net
- How Kristeva's theory of abjection works in relation to the fairy tale and post colonial novel: Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber, and Keri Hulme's The Bone People. ...
- I will begin this essay by defining the terms abject and abjection. I will then proceed to outline how Kristeva's theory of abjection works by summarising the main points of The Powers Of Horror: An Essay On Abjection. I will then continue to develop the essay by identifying abjection in two of Angela Carter's stories in her collection The Bloody Chamber: the title story and 'The Tiger's Bride', and Keri Hulme's The Bone People. In doing this I hope to expose and evaluate the impact abjection makes on the form and genre of these two texts. In addition, and as a summarising overview I will incorporate my own responses to abjection in relation to the texts. ...
- " It describes abjection as a "state of misery or degradation. ... Thus, it is useful to consider how abjection is expressed. ...
- In Powers Of Horror:An Essay On Abjection Kristeva identifies that we first experience abjection at the point of separation from the mother. This idea is drawn from Lacan's psychoanalytical theory which underpins her theory of abjection. She identifies that abjection represents a revolt against that which gave us our own existence or state of being. ... Hence, Kristeva's theory of abjection is concerned with figures that are in a state of transition or transformation. ...
- " 3 Thus we can deduce from Kristeva's essay that the main point of her theory of abjection is that "The abject is perverse because it neither gives up nor assumes a prohibition, a rule, or law; but turns them aside, misleads, corrupts; uses them, takes advantage of them, the better to deny them. ...
- Abjection is a consistent feature of Angela Carter's 'The Bloody Chamber' and 'The Tiger's Bride'. ...
- Carter's use of abjection in 'The Bloody Chamber ' transforms the fairy tale genre beyond its conventions into the realm of pornographic gothic fantasy. ... Consequently, we can recognise that Carter has utilised abjection in 'The Bloody Chamber' as a conscious strategy to disrupt the conventions of the fairy tale. ...
8. A Kristevan Viewing of The Matrix
- www.members.cox.net
- Abjection .
- The first few lines of Kristeva's book (Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection) could easily be confused for a synopsis of the central conflict in The Matrix: There looms, within abjection, one of those violent, dark revolts of being, directed against a threat that seems to emanate from an exorbitant outside or inside, ejected beyond the scope of the possible, the tolerable, the thinkable. ...
- Kristeva argues that it is not "lack of cleanliness or health that causes abjection but what disturbs the identity, system, order. ...
- " As Kristeva points out, the object of abjection lies close by-- in fact, all around Neo and the others-- but it cannot be assimilated. ...
- His abjection is literal in his elimination from the system like human waste in a huge toilet. ...
- In essence, his physical abjection begins the ritual of his purification. ...
- He does not want to remember his abjection or his separation. ... In short, Cypher typifies one of Kristeva's contentions: "There is nothing like abjection of self to show that all abjection is, in fact, recognition of the want on which any being, meaning, language, or desire is founded. " (5) Abjection • Duality • Defilement .
9. "Abjection" by Inge Sorensen
- www.otago.ac.nz
- Abjection in The Bone People and The Queen of The Tambourine .
- An Essay on Abjection).
- Seeing Keri Hulme's The Bone People and Jane Gardam's The Queen of The Tambourine in the light of Kristeva's theory of abjection is very illuminating. Although The Bone People and The Queen of The Tambourine deal with very different aspects of the abject, the abject and abjection are present throughout both texts thematically and stylistically. The abject and abjection are used to support and precipitate the texts' themes of transformation and redefinition of identity. ...
- The Abject and Abjection .
- Kristeva describes the abjection the subject experiences when in contact with the abject as confrontations with "our earliest attempts to release the hold of the maternal entity, even before ex-isting outside her, thanks to the autonomy of language" 1 . ...
- Kristeva sees abjection and the abject as "the primers of our culture" 3 . Abjection of the abject is the subject's safeguard against being swallowed up by the semiotic order and avoiding the threats of annihilation of the self that contact with the semiotic order entails. ... Abjection becomes the way in which the subject can maintain the integrity of its self when confronted with the Other and the semiotic order. ...
- Through abjection, jouissance and by merging with the Other and the semiotic order, the characters of the texts enable themselves to transform; re-enter the symbolic order, re-name their worlds and through this re-define themselves. ...
- - Almost archetypal elements of the abject and abjection. ...
- Like Simon in The Bone People the abject and abjection are personified by Eliza and her madness in The Queen of The Tambourine. ... Contact with and abjection of the abject happens inside Eliza's head only. ... For example, Eliza's feelings of abjection when confronted with the turtle represents a repression of her memories of her miscarriage and Joan is in reality "the family I wished was mine" 5 . ...
- This abjection of the abject enables Eliza to reenter the mirror phase through "using Joan as mirror image" and from there to re-enter the symbolic order. ...
10. "Kristeva's Theory of Abjection" by Samantha Pentony
- www.otago.ac.nz
- How Kristeva's theory of abjection works in relation to the fairy tale and post colonial novel: Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber, and Keri Hulme's The Bone People. ...
- I will begin this essay by defining the terms abject and abjection. I will then proceed to outline how Kristeva's theory of abjection works by summarising the main points of The Powers Of Horror: An Essay On Abjection. I will then continue to develop the essay by identifying abjection in two of Angela Carter's stories in her collection The Bloody Chamber: the title story and 'The Tiger's Bride', and Keri Hulme's The Bone People. In doing this I hope to expose and evaluate the impact abjection makes on the form and genre of these two texts. In addition, and as a summarising overview I will incorporate my own responses to abjection in relation to the texts. ...
- " It describes abjection as a "state of misery or degradation. ... Thus, it is useful to consider how abjection is expressed. ...
- In Powers Of Horror:An Essay On Abjection Kristeva identifies that we first experience abjection at the point of separation from the mother. This idea is drawn from Lacan's psychoanalytical theory which underpins her theory of abjection. She identifies that abjection represents a revolt against that which gave us our own existence or state of being. ... Hence, Kristeva's theory of abjection is concerned with figures that are in a state of transition or transformation. ...
- " 3 Thus we can deduce from Kristeva's essay that the main point of her theory of abjection is that "The abject is perverse because it neither gives up nor assumes a prohibition, a rule, or law; but turns them aside, misleads, corrupts; uses them, takes advantage of them, the better to deny them. ...
- Abjection is a consistent feature of Angela Carter's 'The Bloody Chamber' and 'The Tiger's Bride'. ...
- Carter's use of abjection in 'The Bloody Chamber ' transforms the fairy tale genre beyond its conventions into the realm of pornographic gothic fantasy. ... Consequently, we can recognise that Carter has utilised abjection in 'The Bloody Chamber' as a conscious strategy to disrupt the conventions of the fairy tale. ...
11. Stand-Up Comedy in Theory, Or, Abjection in America (New Americanists) - Books
- www.mykidstoystore.com
- Stand-Up Comedy in Theory, Or, Abjection in America (New Americanists) Toys.
- Stand-Up Comedy in Theory, Or, Abjection in America (New Americanists) by: John Limon Your Price: $19. ...
- Great TOYS! Stand-Up Comedy in Theory, Or, Abjection in America (New Americanists). All kids love to play with Stand-Up Comedy in Theory, Or, Abjection in America (New Americanists) Toys! This type of toy and/or game is exciting and fun, something your kids will enjoy! .
12. Julia Kristeva, "Approaching Abjection"
- social.chass.ncsu.edu
- --Julia Kristeva, "Approaching Abjection.
- Note: This is (most of) chapter one of Kristeva's book, Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. ...
- There looms, within abjection, one of those violent, dark revolts of being, directed against a threat that seems to emanate from an exorbitant outside or inside, ejected beyond the scope of the possible, the tolerable, the thinkable. ...
- When I am beset by abjection, the twisted braid of affects and thoughts I call by such a name does not have, properly speaking, a definable object. ... There, abject and abjection are my safeguards. ...
- Food loathing is perhaps the most elementary and most archaic form of abjection. ...
- The corpse, seen without God and outside of science, is the utmost of abjection. ...
- It is thus not lack of cleanliness or health that causes abjection but what disturbs identity, system, order. ... Abjection, on the other hand, is immoral, sinister, scheming, and shady: a terror that dissembles, a hatred that smiles, a passion that uses the body for barter instead of inflaming it, a debtor who sets you up, a friend who stabs you. ...
- The abjection of Nazi crime reaches its apex when death, which, in any case, kills me, interferes with what, in my living universe, is supposed to save me from death: childhood, science, among other things. ...
- THE ABJECTION OF SELF .
- The abjection of self would be the culminating form of that experience of the subject to which it is revealed that all its objects are based merely on the inaugural loss that laid the foundations of its own being. There is nothing like the abjection of self to show that all abjection is in fact recognition of the want on which any being, meaning, language, or desire is founded. ... " But if one imagines (and imagine one must, for it is the working of imagination whose foundations are being laid here) the experience of want itself as logically preliminary to being and object - to the being of the object - then one understands that abjection, and even more so abjection of self, is its only signified. ... Mystical Christendom turned this abjection of self into the ultimate proof of humility before God, witness Elizabeth of Hungary who "though a great princess, delighted in nothing so much as in abasing herself. ...
- The question remains as to the ordeal, a secular one this time, that abjection can constitute for someone who, in what is termed knowledge of castration, turning away from perverse dodges, presents himself with his own body and ego as the most precious non-objects; they are no longer seen in their own right but forfeited, abject. ...
Other related topics:
Do you have a great site about Abjection? Is
your Abjection site listed here?
Would you like a prefered placement of your site in this directory?
It's easy! First place, the HTML from the box below on your page that
you would like listed in this directory.
Then use our link submission request with
your name, your contact information, and the URL of your site that has
a link to this directory. After we
verify your link to us, we'll make sure your site stays in our directory,
and we'll give it prefered placement here also.
Here is how to make a simple text link to us. Just copy the code in this
box to your website:
We can also develop a custom Guide To The Internet for your site. Please
request your own
custom Guide To The Internet.
This custom Guide To The Internet produced by
Siql. Visit us today, and find out how to get your own
custom guide to the Internet, and how to get your site
listed in our guides.
Copyright 1995-2004 by Siql. All
Rights Reserved.