| Michel Foucault - 1980 - عدد الصفحات: 244
...is because it began and continues its secret existence through a "host of errors and phantasms."47 We want historians to confirm our belief that the...events, without a landmark or a point of reference. Effective history can also invert the relationship that traditional history, in its dependence on metaphysics,... | |
| Jason Philip Rosenblatt, Joseph C. Sitterson (Jr.) - 1991 - عدد الصفحات: 276
...meaning, or their initial and final value. On the contrary, it is a profusion of entangled events. . . . We want historians to confirm our belief that the...countless lost events, without a landmark or a point of reference.21 I have argued that despite the Bible's effort to make sense of the profusion of events,... | |
| Susan Howe - 1993 - عدد الصفحات: 212
...of history in a large sense. The Anglo-Saxon race is but one of the races of the world" (wj 1 : 19). "We want historians to confirm our belief that the...among countless lost events, without a landmark or point of reference," says Michel Foucault in "Nietzsche, Genealogy, History" (LCP 155). "For the little... | |
| John Charles Hawley - 1994 - عدد الصفحات: 264
...to history by Michel Foucault with the Schadenfreude we have come to associate with postmodernism: "We want historians to confirm our belief that the...events, without a landmark or a point of reference" (Foucault 1977: 156 - 157, cited in Wright 1988: 84). The balloon is well-inflated, the wind is up,... | |
| Elspeth Probyn - 1996 - عدد الصفحات: 196
...beginnings. Rather than re-placing us in direct connection with a comforting, familiar past, genealogy or "the true historical sense confirms our existence...countless lost events, without a landmark or a point ot reference" (1977: 159). Instead of pristine referents, what we have is the visible and chaotic void... | |
| Richard L. Meth, Robert S. Pasick - 1991 - عدد الصفحات: 628
...meaning, or their initial and final value. On the contrary, it is a profusion of entangled events. . . . The true historical sense confirms our existence among countless lost events, without a landmark or point of reference" (1977: 155). Yet, Foucault also claims: "History has no 'meaning," though that... | |
| Keith Jenkins - 1997 - عدد الصفحات: 468
...this is because it began and continues its secret existence through a "host of errors and phantasms." We want historians to confirm our belief that the...events, without a landmark or a point of reference. Effective history can also invert the relationship that traditional history, in its dependence on metaphysics,... | |
| Jeremy Moss - 1998 - عدد الصفحات: 232
...this is because it began and continues its secret existence through a 'host of errors and phantasms.' We want historians to confirm our belief that the...events, without a landmark or a point of reference. 45 The significance for political thinking of history's composition by accidents and unrelated events... | |
| Daniel W. Conway, Peter S. Groff - 1998 - عدد الصفحات: 396
...is because it began and continues its secret existence through a 'host of errors and phantasms.'47 We want historians to confirm our belief that the...events, without a landmark or a point of reference. Effective history can also invert the relationship that traditional history, in its dependence on metaphysics,... | |
| Michael J. Gronow - 1998 - عدد الصفحات: 264
...attraction is not that of a conclusion, for they always appear through the single randomness of events... We want historians to confirm our belief that the...profound intentions and immutable necessities. But the truc historical sense confirms our existence among countless lost events, without a landmark or a point... | |
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