04664oam 2200769I 450 991095773460332120251116155455.01-135-13091-40-203-07732-61-283-87136-X1-135-13092-210.4324/9780203077320 (CKB)2550000000709631(EBL)1097799(OCoLC)823388782(SSID)ssj0000810911(PQKBManifestationID)11494983(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000810911(PQKBWorkID)10833745(PQKB)10173559(MiAaPQ)EBC1097799(Au-PeEL)EBL1097799(CaPaEBR)ebr10635047(CaONFJC)MIL418386(OCoLC)822018729(FINmELB)ELB134298(EXLCZ)99255000000070963120180706d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe experience of tragic judgment /Julen Etxabe1st ed.Abingdon, Oxon :Routledge,2013.1 online resource (265 p.)"A GlassHouse book."0-415-65718-0 0-415-63934-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Title; Copyright Page; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Antigone and the experience of legal judgment; 1 A window on the normative world; 1.1 Nomos: a normative world; 1.2 The construction of norms; 1.3 Mapping the social trajectories; 1.4 The pathos of judgment; 1.5 Judgment in tragedy and law; 2 Antigone, Part I: Beginnings; 2.1 Antigone and Ismene at the palace gates; 2.2 Parodos: first entrance of the Chorus; 2.3 Creon, new King of Thebes: inaugural speech; 2.4 The guard enters the palace; 2.5 First stasimon: Ode on Man2.6 Antigone and Creon: the clash of nomoi3 Incommensurability and judgment; 3.1 Berlin and the incommensurable clash of ends; 3.2 Raz and the constitutive incommensurability of social practices; 3.3 Wiggins: tragic dilemmas and forms of life; 3.4 Lyotard's differend and the incommensurability of judgment; 3.5 Rancière's disagreement and the staging of the conflict; 3.6 Incommensurability, Antigone, and law; 4 Antigone, Part II: Transitions; 4.1 Ismene comes forward; 4.2 Second stasimon: disaster returns again; 4.3 Haemon: son and groom; 4.4 Third stasimon: the power of Eros4.5 Antigone's farewell march4.6 Fourth stasimon: besieged as others; 5 Acts of reading, acts of judgment; 5.1 The challenge of Plato; 5.2 The truth of tragedy: vindicating the tragic experience; 5.3 The power of emotions: ""education sentimentale""; 5.4 A good judge or judging well?; 5.5 Six spaces of judgment; 5.6 The tragic audience and the judge; 6 Antigone, Part III: Realizations; 6.1 Teiresias: seer and counselor; 6.2 Fifth stasimon: Dionysus, the Chorus Master; 6.3 Tragic news; 6.4 Final laments; 7 The temporalities of judgment: Antigone and law; 7.1 The originality of Antigone7.2 The genealogy of Antigone's law7.3 The law of the Antigone and the experiences of the audience; 7.4 The narrative configuration of time: the temporalities of judgment; 7.5 The experience of judging tragic conflicts: hard cases, anew; Appendix; Notes; Works cited; IndexAdjudication between conflicting normative universes that do not share the same vocabulary, standards of rationality, and moral commitments cannot be resolved by recourse to traditional principles. Such cases are always in a sense tragic. And what is called for, in our pluralistic and conflictual world is not to be found, as many would suppose, in an impersonal set of procedures with which all participants could be treated as having rationally agreed. The very idea of such a neutral system is an illusion. Rather, what is needed, Julen Etxabe argues in this book, is a heightened awareness ofJudgmentsLawMoral and ethical aspectsGreek drama (Tragedy)Judicial processLaw and ethicsLawPhilosophyJudgments.LawMoral and ethical aspects.Greek drama (Tragedy)Judicial process.Law and ethics.LawPhilosophy.174/.3Etxabe Julen1871698MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910957734603321The experience of tragic judgment4480619UNINA05326nam 22007095 450 991099969400332120250423130221.03-031-77555-410.1007/978-3-031-77555-0(CKB)38586707000041(DE-He213)978-3-031-77555-0(MiAaPQ)EBC32027548(Au-PeEL)EBL32027548(OCoLC)1518201626(EXLCZ)993858670700004120250423d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEnds of the Global City Disaffection, Displacement and the New Cultural Ecologies of the Urban /edited by Rashmi Varma, Jini Kim Watson1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2025.1 online resource (XIV, 211 p. 7 illus.) New Comparisons in World Literature,2634-61093-031-77554-6 Introduction -- Chapter 1: A World of Confinement and Compartments: Fanon, Césaire and the Suffocating City -- Chapter 2: Postsecular Ecology and the Global City in Chris Abani‟s The Virgin of Flames -- Chapter 3: The Gulf City in Crisis: Reimagining Migrant Labour Protests in Deepak Unnikrishnan‟s Temporary People -- Chapter 4: Food and Memory in a Global City: the Khanapados/Living Lab Project in New Delhi, by Mrityunjay Chatterjee and Sreejata Roy -- Chapter 5: Narrative Energetics and Energy Ontologies in Singapore: Powering Petro-conscious Dystopian Novels -- Chapter 6: Aesthetics of Mythorealism in Ma Jian‟s The Dark Road: The Rural Peasant in China‟s Global Cities -- Chapter 7: More Hell Than Hell‟”: Seoul, Korean Drama, and Global Imaginaries of Capitalism -- Chapter 8: Archipelago of Illegals: Sydney, Migrant Spatiality, and Aravind Adiga‟s Amnesty -- Afterword: The Global City at a Tilt.“Ends of the Global City offers an unsurpassed guide to the underlying causes of the urban polycrisis. The essays in the collection survey the terrain of contemporary urban life, parsing the new affective and aesthetic registers that germinate in global cities, and, in the process, opening new vistas on a common right to the city.” —Ashley Dawson, author of Environmentalism from Below: How Global People's Movements Are Leading the Fight for Our Planet “The contributors to this volume succeed in laying out a set of propositions regarding both Global North and Global South cities that will resonate with thinking in this field for a long time to come. Ends of the Global City provides a fresh new paradigm for re-thinking the very idea of the global city.” —Ato Quayson, author of Oxford Street, Accra: City Life and the Itineraries of Transnationalism “Responding to the pandemic’s crisis narrative, this remarkable collection navigates the landscape of urban ruin that has doggedly shadowed the discourse of the global city. The result is a powerful and significant intervention in reimagining the global city's past, present, and future.” —Ranjani Mazumdar, author of Bombay Cinema: An Archive of the City This volume of essays explores how the global city is confronting new forms of crises and disruption. Examining cities in the Caribbean, North America, Africa, the Persian Gulf, Asia and Australia, the essays use literary and cultural analysis to examine the pasts, present and futures of the global city. Ranging from the period of high postcolonial development, industrialization and compacted modernization to present-day neoliberal urban planning, the collection considers arrivals and departures in the global city, offering new critical vocabularies to analyse ongoing processes of migration, economic immiseration, and environmental collapse. Rashmi Varma is Professor of English and Comparative Literary Studies at the University of Warwick, UK. Jini Kim Watson is Associate Professor of Postcolonial and Transpacific Literatures at the University of Melbourne, Australia.New Comparisons in World Literature,2634-6109LiteratureLiterature, Modern20th centuryLiterature, Modern21st centuryArchitectureImperialismCities and townsHistoryWorld LiteratureContemporary LiteratureCities, Countries, RegionsImperialism and ColonialismUrban HistoryLiterature.Literature, ModernLiterature, ModernArchitecture.Imperialism.Cities and townsHistory.World Literature.Contemporary Literature.Cities, Countries, Regions.Imperialism and Colonialism.Urban History.809.89Varma Rashmiedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtWatson Jini Kimedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910999694003321Ends of the Global City4375967UNINA