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2016-02-02
Catherine Malabou. The Deconstruction of Biopolitics. 2012
source: European Graduate School 2012年12月21日
http://www.egs.edu/ Catherine Malabou, philosopher and author, talking about Foucault's deconstruction of biopolitics. In this lecture Catherine Malabou discusses Hobbe's Leviathan model of sovereignty, biopolitics as disciplinary power, the relationship between biology and politics, Agamben's critique of Foucault and the function of symbolism in psychoanalysis in relationship to Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, Jacques Derrida, Thomas Hobbes, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Aristotle, Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan focusing on non-sovereign power, biopower, the individual body, will, the notion of organism, the structure of kingship, power relations, intentionality, resistance, self-subjugation, transgression and sexuality. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012. Catherine Malabou.
Catherine Malabou, Ph.D., born in 1959, was a student at the École normal supérieure (ENS) and Sorbonne University in France. She wrote her dissertation on Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel under the direction of the French philosopher Jacques Derrida, completing it in 1994. The thesis was published in 1996 under the title L'Avenir de Hegel, plasticité, temporalité, dialectique (The Future of Hegel: Plasticity, Temporality, and Dialectic). Catherine Malabou has taught at Nanterre University in Paris, the University of California at Berkeley, the New School for Social Research in New York City and currently is a full-time professor at the Centre for Modern European Philosophy of Kingston in the United Kingdom. She also teaches an intensive summer seminar at the European Graduate School (EGS).
Marvin Harris: Cultural Materialist Research Strategy
source: Max Power 2014年11月30日
A brief presentation on the research strategy of cultural materialism. This video presentation is from Macro Social Theory, by Frank W. Elwell. This book focuses on the macro social theory of Marx, Durkheim, Weber, Malthus, and Spencer as well as contemporary expressions of these classics. The contemporary theorists covered include Harry Braverman, John Bellamy Foster, Robert K. Merton, Robert Nisbet, Neil Postman, Norbert Elias, George Ritzer, Gerhard Lenski, Stephen Sanderson, Stjepan Mestrovic, C. Wright Mills, Ester Boserup, and Immanuel Wallerstein.
Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey
# automatic playing for the 13 videos (click the up-left corner for the list)
source: Reading Marx's Capital with David Harvey 2010年10月27日
An open course consisting of a close reading of the text of Volume I of Marx's Capital in 13 video lectures by Professor David Harvey.
The page numbers Professor Harvey refers to are valid for both the Penguin Classics and Vintage Books editions of Capital.
Class 01 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:51:08
Class 02 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:45:55
Class 03 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:49:29
Class 04 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:36:53
Class 05 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:36:10
Class 06 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:46:43
Class 07 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:41:19
Class 08 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:38:23
Class 09 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:21:37
Class 10 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:44:00
Class 11 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:58:02
Class 12 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:25:12
Class 13 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:18:58
source: Reading Marx's Capital with David Harvey 2010年10月27日
An open course consisting of a close reading of the text of Volume I of Marx's Capital in 13 video lectures by Professor David Harvey.
The page numbers Professor Harvey refers to are valid for both the Penguin Classics and Vintage Books editions of Capital.
Class 01 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:51:08
Class 02 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:45:55
Class 03 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:49:29
Class 04 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:36:53
Class 05 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:36:10
Class 06 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:46:43
Class 07 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:41:19
Class 08 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:38:23
Class 09 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:21:37
Class 10 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:44:00
Class 11 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:58:02
Class 12 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:25:12
Class 13 Reading Marx's Capital Vol I with David Harvey 1:18:58
Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey
# automatic playing for the 12 videos (click the up-left corner for the list)
source: Reading Marx's Capital with David Harvey 2012年1月23日
An open course consisting of a close reading of the text of Volume 2 (plus parts of Volume 3) of Marx's Capital in 12 video lectures by Professor David Harvey.
Class 01 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:38:00
Class 02 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:42:06
Class 03 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:51:18
Class 04 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:43:28
Class 05 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:44:59
Class 06 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 2:01:11
Class 07 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:50:39
Class 08 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:41:35
Class 09 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:50:37
Class 10 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:53:36
Class 11 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:39:45
Class 12 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:39:48
source: Reading Marx's Capital with David Harvey 2012年1月23日
An open course consisting of a close reading of the text of Volume 2 (plus parts of Volume 3) of Marx's Capital in 12 video lectures by Professor David Harvey.
Class 01 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:38:00
Class 02 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:42:06
Class 03 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:51:18
Class 04 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:43:28
Class 05 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:44:59
Class 06 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 2:01:11
Class 07 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:50:39
Class 08 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:41:35
Class 09 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:50:37
Class 10 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:53:36
Class 11 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:39:45
Class 12 Reading Marx's Capital Vol 2 with David Harvey 1:39:48
Greg Goode - 'Philosophical Deconstruction' (2009) - Interview by Chris Hebard
source: conscioustv 2010年6月6日
Greg Goode - 'Philosophical Deconstruction' - Interview by Chris Hebard
Greg has been a philosophical counsellor since 1996. After studying Psychology at California State University, he studied philosophy at the Universitat zu Koln in Cologne, Germany, and received his M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Rochester. His areas of specialization were decision theory, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of George Berkeley. His doctoral dissertation was on the question, "Is it ever rational to be impatient?" Greg studied Advaita Vedanta through the Chinmaya Mission, Sri Atmananda, Jean Klein, and Francis Lucille. He studied the Mahayana teachings of Pure Land Buddhism through Jodo-Shinshu, and studied Chinese Middle-Way Buddhism through the lineage of the pre-eminent scholar of Chinese Buddhism, Master Yin-Shun of Taiwan, P.R.C. and author of The Way to Buddhahood.
www.conscious.tv
Deconstruction today (26 Jan 2010) by Mairéad Hanrahan at UCL
source: UCL Lunch Hour Lectures 2010年8月27日
UCL Lunch Hour Lecture: Deconstruction today
Professor Mairéad Hanrahan (UCL French)
Deconstruction is now over forty years old but although the term has passed into common parlance, no consensus has yet emerged about what it means or seeks to do. Many in various disciplines extol it as one of the most significant intellectual breakthroughs ever; others dismiss it as anti scientific obscurantism. This lecture attempts to explain why, after such a long time (an eternity in academic terms), deconstruction can still arouse such passionate disagreements.
Deconstruction (by Paul Fry at Yale University)
source: YaleCourses 2009年9月1日
Lecture 10 from Introduction to Theory of Literature (ENGL 300)
In this lecture on Derrida and the origins of deconstruction, Professor Paul Fry explores two central Derridian works: "Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of Human Sciences" and "Différance." Derrida's critique of structuralism and semiotics, particularly the work of Levi-Strauss and Saussure, is articulated. Deconstruction's central assertions that language is by nature arbitrary and that meaning is indeterminate are examined. Key concepts, such as the nature of the text, discourse, différance, and supplementarity are explored.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Origins and Influence of Jacques Derrida
06:33 - Chapter 2. Derrida's Style
09:25 - Chapter 3. The Eiffel Tower and Wallace Stevens' "Anecdote of the Jar"
17:00 - Chapter 4. Levi-Strauss and the Oedipus Myth
22:39 - Chapter 5. Derrida and Semiotic Science
28:13 - Chapter 6. "Event" and History
33:42 - Chapter 7. Language and Writing
42:34 - Chapter 8. Language, Supplementarity, and Différance
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.
上傳日期:2009年9月1日
Lecture 11 from Introduction to Theory of Literature (ENGL 300)
In this second lecture on deconstruction, Professor Paul Fry concludes his consideration of Derrida and begins to explore the work of Paul de Man. Derrida's affinity for and departure from Levi-Strauss's distinction between nature and culture are outlined. De Man's relationship with Derrida, their similarities and differences--particularly de Man's insistence on "self-deconstruction" and his reliance on Jakobson--are discussed. The difference between rhetoric and grammar, particularly the rhetoricization of grammar and the grammaticization of rhetoric, is elucidated through de Man's own examples taken from "All in the Family," Yeats' "Among School Children," and the novels of Proust.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Derrida and Levi-Strauss
10:37 - Chapter 2. Writing and Speech
16:06 - Chapter 3. Paul de Man and Nazism
24:37 - Chapter 4. Similarities Between De Man and Derrida
33:35 - Chapter 5. De Man and Derrida: Differences
39:24 - Chapter 6. Examples: "All in the Family," Yeats, and Proust
The Frankfurt School of Critical Theory (2009) by Paul H. Fry at Yale University
source: YaleCourses 2009年9月1日
Lecture 17 from Introduction to Theory of Literature (ENGL 300)
This first lecture on social theories of art and artistic production examines the Frankfurt School. The theoretical writings of Theodor Adorno and Walter Benjamin are explored in historical and political contexts, including Marxism, socialist realism, and late capitalism. The concept of mechanical reproduction, specifically the relationship between labor and art, is explained at some length. Adorno's opposition to this argument, and his own position, are explained. The lecture concludes with a discussion of Benjamin's perspective on the use of distraction and shock in the process of aesthetic revelation.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Marx, Engels, and Ideology
09:46 - Chapter 2. The Aesthetics of Marxist Criticism
19:58 - Chapter 3. Adorno, the Work of Art, and Collectivity
27:54 - Chapter 4. Bloch's Principle of Hope
31:09 - Chapter 5. Benjamin and Mechanical Reproduction
37:54 - Chapter 6. Adorno and Conformism
41:01 - Chapter 7. Benjamin, the Spectator, and Distraction
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.
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