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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2013

Pages: 465-479

Series: Continental Philosophy Review

Full citation:

Sina Kramer, "On negativity in revolution in poetic language", Continental Philosophy Review 46 (3), 2013, pp. 465-479.

On negativity in revolution in poetic language

Sina Kramer

pp. 465-479

in: Continental Philosophy Review 46 (3), 2013.

Abstract

Kristeva's Revolution in Poetic Language offers a challenge to theories of the subject in psychoanalysis, linguistic theory, and in philosophy. Central to that challenge is Kristeva's conception of negativity. In this article, I trace the development of the concept of negativity in Revolution in Poetic Language from its root in Hegel, to rejection, which Kristeva develops out of Freud. Both are crucial to the development of the material dialectic between the semiotic and the symbolic that makes up Kristeva's subject-in-process/on trial. I argue that a clearer understanding of Kristeva's conception of negativity helps us to better appreciate the force of Kristeva's challenge, both philosophically and politically. Finally I argue that Kristevan negativity also helps us to clarify the relation between the delimited space of politics and its conditions, laying the groundwork for constitutive exclusion as political critique and opening a space for the possibility of political re-constitutions.

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2013

Pages: 465-479

Series: Continental Philosophy Review

Full citation:

Sina Kramer, "On negativity in revolution in poetic language", Continental Philosophy Review 46 (3), 2013, pp. 465-479.