The Opposite of the Concentration Camp: Nancy's Vision of Community

Such an endeavor is crucial, given that the frameworks that dominate literary criticism devoted to community are generally restricted and reduced by a traditional and largely unrecognized formulation of the individual as a point of departure. Highlighting such an observation is important for it is h...

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Veröffentlicht in:CR (East Lansing, Mich.) Mich.), 2005-12, Vol.5 (3), p.167-205
1. Verfasser: Luszczynska, Ana
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description Such an endeavor is crucial, given that the frameworks that dominate literary criticism devoted to community are generally restricted and reduced by a traditional and largely unrecognized formulation of the individual as a point of departure. Highlighting such an observation is important for it is here, in the context of the individual, that "we" have been and remain (Nancy 1991, 11-12).2 Furthermore, it is a crucial point insofar as it would seem that if pressed, we all know, have some kind of an understanding (however unformulated it may be), that being exists in relation in a complex, important, even fundamental way; there is sense that the detached being-side-by-side of the individual is simply inadequate to the connections of being (or that are being). ANA M. LUSZCZYNSKA is Assistant Professor of English at Florida International University in Miami and teaches courses in literary theory, African-American literature, and U.S. Latino literature.
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1539-6630
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source Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects African Americans
Communitarianism
Communities
Community
Community relations
Concentration camps
Death
Death & dying
English as an international language
Essays
Finitude
Immanence
Literary criticism
Literary theory
Literature
Metaphysics
Morrison, Toni (1931-2019)
Nancy, Jean-Luc
Sovereignty
Subjectivity
Theory
title The Opposite of the Concentration Camp: Nancy's Vision of Community
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