All Stories

  1. Re-enactment and Traumatic Memory: Cinematic Ethics in The Act of Killing and S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine
  2. Love Sick: Malick's Kierkegaardian ‘Weightless’ Trilogy
  3. Introduction
  4. Introduction: On Stanley Cavell
  5. Cavellian Meditations: How to do Things with Film and Philosophy
  6. ANATOMY OFMELANCHOLIA
  7. Black Swan: A History of Continental Philosophy in Australia and New Zealand
  8. Art and Time by Allan, Derek
  9. György Markus
  10. The Reality of Film: Theories of Filmic Reality
  11. Critical Theory As Disclosing Critique: A Response to Kompridis
  12. Stimmung: exploring the aesthetics of mood
  13. Sea-change: Transforming the ‘crisis’ in film theory
  14. The future of critical theory? Kompridis on world-disclosing critique
  15. 6. Power, Recognition, And Care: Honneth’s Critique Of Poststructuralist Social Philosophy
  16. Review Essay
  17. The Charmed Circle of Ideology: A Critique of Laclau and Mouffe, Butler and Zizek by Geoff Boucher
  18. Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance: Simon Critchley's Infinitely Demanding
  19. Neo-Anarchism or Neo-Liberalism? Yes, Please! A Response to Simon Critchley'sInfinitely Demanding
  20. Understanding Hegelianism
  21. Nikolas Kompridis (ed.), Philosophical Romanticism
  22. Recognition, Work, Politics
  23. The Politics of the Multiple
  24. Nikolas Kompridis, Critique and Disclosure: Critical Theory between Past and Future
  25. Deconstructive Justice and the “Critique of Violence”: On Derrida and Benjamin
  26. Critique Hope, Power: Challenges of Contemporary Critical Theory
  27. From Machenschaft to Biopolitics: A Genealogical Critique of Biopower
  28. Recognitive Freedom: Hegel and the Problem of Recognition
  29. Active slaves and reactive masters? Deleuze's anti‐dialectical niezsche
  30. The cook, the thief, his wife and her lover:A discourse on disgust
  31. Preface and acknowledgements
  32. Introducing Hegelian idealism
  33. Adventures in Hegelianism
  34. Further reading
  35. References
  36. Introduction: Hegel and the Enlightenment
  37. Reification and metaphysics: Lukács and Heidegger
  38. Enlightenment, domination and non-identity: Adorno's negative dialectics
  39. Modernity, intersubjectivity and recognition: Habermas and Honneth
  40. French Hegelianism and its discontents: Wahl, Hyppolite, Kojève
  41. Between existentialism and Marxism: Sartre, de Beauvoir, Merleau-Ponty
  42. Deconstructing Hegelianism: Deleuze, Derrida and the question of difference
  43. The future of Hegelianism
  44. Questions for discussion and revision