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Pulse of Sense: Encounters with Jean-Luc Nancy [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Catholic University of Paris, France), Edited by (University of Cambridge, UK)
This volume stages a series of encounters between the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy and leading scholars of his work along four major themes of Nancys thought: sense, experience, existence, and Christianity.

In doing so, the volume seeks to remind readers that Nancys sens has many meanings in French: aside from those that easily carry over into English, i.e., everything to do with "meaning" and "the senses"; it also includes the "way" they are "conducted," the "direction" they take, the "thrust" or "pulse" in which the circulation of sense exists. Faithful to this plural understanding of sens, the writings collected here aim to join Jean-Luc Nancy in the process of "making-sense" that animates his thinking, rather than to deliver a definitive summary of his position on any given issue. They are conceived of as notes "along the way," documenting "encounters" as moments of "(re)direction" and recording the "pulse" of sense that animates them. In that spirit, Nancy himself has provided each contribution with an "echo" in which he, in turn, responds to each author and thereby continues their mutual encounter. Aside from these echoes, this volume includes an original essay in which Nancy reflects upon the international trajectory of his thinking; a trajectory that is to be and undoubtedly will be continued, in many different directions, across and around the world.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.
Citation Information vii
Notes on Contributors x
Foreword xii
Marie Chabbert
Nikolaas Deketelaere
Acknowledgements xiv
Introduction: The Conduct of Existence 1(10)
Marie Chabbert
Nikolaas Deketelaere
The Fragility of Sense
1 The World's Fragile Skin
11(5)
Jean-Luc Nancy
Marie Chabbert
Nikolaas Deketelaere
2 Insistence, or the Force of Jean-Luc Nancy
16(15)
Irving Goh
3 Nancy on Trial: Thinking Philosophy and the Jurisdictional
31(10)
Peter Gratton
4 The Fragility of Thinking
41(18)
Leslie Hill
The Poetics of Experience
5 Pir-ating the Given: Jean-Luc Nancy's Critique of Empiricism
59(12)
Benjamin Hutchens
6 Abraham's Ordeal: Jean-Luc Nancy and Søren Kierkegaard on the Poetics of Faith
71(21)
Nikolaas Deketelaere
7 Interpreters of the Divine: Nancy's Poet, Jeremiah the Prophet, and Saint Paul's Glossolalist
92(11)
Gert-Jan van der Heiden
8 Art's Passing for Hegel, Lacoue-Labarthe, and Nancy
103(14)
John McKeane
The Corporeality of Existence
9 Jean-Luc Nancy, a Romantic Philosopher? On Romance, Love, and Literature
117(13)
Aukje van Rooden
10 Spread Body and Exposed Body: Dialogue with Jean-Luc Nancy
130(13)
Emmanuel Falque
Marie Chabbert
Nikolaas Deketelaere
11 An Ontology for Our Times
143(16)
Marie-Eve Morin
12 Affectivity, Sense, and Affects: Emotions as an Articulation of Biological Life
159(10)
Ian James
The Emancipation of Christianity
13 Metamorphosis or Mutation? Jean-Luc Nancy and the Deconstruction of Christianity
169(16)
Joeri Schrijvers
14 Desecularisation: Thinking Secularisation Beyond Metaphysics
185(17)
Erik Meganck
15 Raising Death: Resurrection Between Christianity and Modernity -- A Dialogue with Jean-Luc Nancy's Noli me tangere
202(12)
Laurens ten Kate
16 The Eternal Return of Religion: Jean-Luc Nancy on Faith in the Singular-Plural
214(18)
Marie Chabbert
17 Nancy Is a Thinker of Radical Emancipation
232(17)
Christopher Watkin
Coda
18 An Accordion Tune
249(4)
Jean-Luc Nancy
Marie Chabbert
Nikolaas Deketelaere
Index 253
Marie Chabbert is Research Fellow at the University of Cambridges St Johns College. Her research interrogates how contemporary French thinkers inaugurate new perspectives for thinking faith in the postsecular age. Her first monograph, Faithful Deicides: Modern French Thought and the Eternal Return of Religion, is forthcoming.

Nikolaas Deketelaere is a researcher at the Catholic University of Paris, France, and the Australian Catholic University. His research considers questions of experience and embodiment in contemporary phenomenology and philosophy of religion. He has published articles in Literature and Theology, Open Theology, and Angelaki.