scholarly journals UMA ANÁLISE DE RÚTILO NADA SOB A PERSPECTIVA QUEER

2021 ◽  
pp. 195-206
Author(s):  
Rita de Kássia de Aquino Gomes ◽  
Rosanne Bezerra de Araújo
Keyword(s):  

O objetivo deste trabalho é investigar a condição relacional dos personagens Lucius e Lucas, em Rútilo Nada (1993), a partir da teoria queer. Apoiando-nos em autores como Judith Butler (2003), Eve Sedgwick (2007) e Richard Miskolci (2012), o estudo refletirá sobre importantes questões, como o regime de heteronormatividade, heterossexismo e heterossexualidade compulsória no qual os personagens de Hilda Hilst estão inseridos, analisando ainda a trajetória da relação em questão, bem como o seu desfecho, sob o viés dos estudos queer.

Author(s):  
Christel Stormhøj

The article examines queer as critique by performing a series of parallel readings of leading queer thinkers, including Judith Butler, Eve Sedgwick, and Michael Warner. Introducing two philosophical traditions and strategies of social critique, immanent and intervening critique, along with their criteria of what is right and good, I discuss how these scholars engage in these strategies and wrestle with their in-built problems within the orbit of the research foci and ambitions of queer studies. Queer critique aims at challenging dominant knowledges, social hierarchies and norms related to sex, sexuality, and gender by exposing the limits they impose on us, including the sufferings associated with them. The article closes with considering queer political visions and their normative underpinnings.


Hypatia ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 597-612 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Billingsley

Eve Sedgwick critiques paranoid methodologies for denying a plurality of affective approaches. Instead, she emphasizes affects such as hope, but her description of hope's openness does not address how hope can avoid discourses that appear to offer amelioration while deceptively masking subjugation. In this context, I will argue that suspicion in feminist political philosophy, as shown in the earlier work of Carole Pateman and Judith Butler, provides a cautious approach toward hope's openness without precluding hope altogether. This analysis will reconsider the domination and empowerment debates in relation to affect, pointing toward compatibilities between the two perspectives. First, I will expand Sedgwick's analysis of hope to explain its potential as a feminist political affect. Second, I will examine the techniques of suspicion employed by Pateman and Butler and how they risk denying possibilities for hope. This will lead to a discussion of how Amy Allen's theory of power indicates that suspicion is compatible with hope. Finally, I will explain how the suspicious approaches of Pateman and Butler illuminate hope as an inherently risky, fragile project. This will show that suspicion does not necessarily take up the totalizing position of paranoia, but rather can productively ensure that hope is not led astray.


Author(s):  
J. F. Bernard

What’s so funny about melancholy? Iconic as Hamlet is, Shakespearean comedy showcases an extraordinary reliance on melancholy that ultimately reminds us of the porous demarcation between laughter and sorrow. This richly contextualized study of Shakespeare’s comic engagement with sadness contends that the playwright rethinks melancholy through comic theatre and, conversely, re-theorizes comedy through melancholy. In fashioning his own comic interpretation of the humour, Shakespeare distils an impressive array of philosophical discourses on the matter, from Aristotle to Robert Burton, and as a result, transforms the theoretical afterlife of both notions. The book suggests that the deceptively potent sorrow at the core of plays such as The Comedy of Errors, Twelfth Night, or The Winter’s Tale influences modern accounts of melancholia elaborated by Sigmund Freud, Judith Butler, and others. What’s so funny about melancholy in Shakespearean comedy? It might just be its reminder that, behind roaring laughter, one inevitably finds the subtle pangs of melancholy.


2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin Runions

In her recent book Precarious Life, Judith Butler points out that not more than ten days after 9/11, on 20 September 2001, George W. Bush urged the American people to put aside their grief; she suggests that such a refusal to mourn leads to a kind of national melancholia. Using psychoanalytic theory on melancholia, this article diagnoses causes and effects of such national melancholia. Further, it considers how a refusal to mourn in prophetic and apocalyptic texts and their interpretations operates within mainstream US American politics like the encrypted loss of the melancholic, thus creating the narcissism, guilt, and aggression that sustain the pervasive disavowal of loss in the contemporary moment. This article explore the ways in which the texts of Ezekiel, Micah, Revelation, and their interpreters exhibit the guilt and aggression of melancholia, in describing Israel as an unfaithful and wicked woman whose pain should not be mourned. These melancholic patterns are inherited by both by contemporary apocalyptic discourses and by the discourse of what Robert Bellah calls ‘American civil religion’, in which the US is the new Christian Israel; thus they help to position the public to accept and perpetuate the violence of war, and not to mourn it.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Maria Riedl
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (34) ◽  
pp. 113
Author(s):  
Johana Cabral ◽  
Ismael Francisco de Souza
Keyword(s):  

<p>O presente artigo realiza um estudo sobre a reprodução da discriminação de gênero na atividade judicial, considerando os julgados que envolvem crianças e adolescentes vítimas de crimes de natureza sexual. Tem por objetivos verificar a influência da cultura machista e sexista na prática judiciária brasileira, a partir da análise das decisões jurisprudenciais do Tribunal de Justiça do Estado de Santa Catarina, nos crimes de natureza sexual cometidos contra menores de 14 anos, que consiste no crime de estupro de vulnerável, previsto no artigo 217-A do Código Penal. Para tanto, será inicialmente apresentado o paradigma da proteção integral, orientador do Direito da Criança e do Adolescente. Em seguida, tratar-se-á sobre o ser mulher e o ser criança em uma sociedade marcada pelo patriarcado e pela violação aos direitos das mulheres, considerando-se as contribuições dos estudos de gênero, especialmente os ensinos de Judith Butler e de Joan Scott. No terceiro momento, será realizada a análise das decisões jurisprudenciais do Tribunal de Justiça de Santa Catarina, para verificar se há a produção e reprodução da discriminação de gênero nos julgados do tribunal catarinense. O método de procedimento foi o monográfico e o de abordagem, o dialético, utilizando-se, para tanto, da pesquisa bibliográfica e jurisprudencial.</p>


Author(s):  
Mizânia Mizilílian Pessoa Barradas de Brito
Keyword(s):  

Este artigo tem como objetivo fazer uma análise crítica da teoria do reconhecimento de Axel Honneth. Judith Butler percebe algumas contradições nesta teoria e busca apontar aspectos que podem colaborar para uma reconstrução teórica do reconhecimento na sociedade atual e como chegar ao objetivo comum que ambos autores têm: autocrítica social e direcionar as lutas sociais para um movimento emancipatório dos grupos sociais vulneráveis.


Author(s):  
Krzysztof Pijarski

The essay takes as its subject Sophie Ristelhueber’s "Fait" and Werner Herzog’s "Lessons of Darkness" (both 1992) to interpret them as instances of ‘pensive’ images. As such – negating the transparency of the photographic image – they are able to internalize the logic of what Judith Butler called their “visual frame, coercive and consensually established,” allowing it to transpire from the picture itself, as well as to confront or to sidetrack the issues of rhetoric and address. The essay tries to see what the two works, in spite of their abstract and decontextualized character, can tell about the war in general, and the Gulf War in particular, claiming that pensive images reflect the world in a more obtuse, but at the same time more thoughtful way.


Author(s):  
Laura Salah Nasrallah

Through case studies of archaeological materials from local contexts, Archaeology and the Letters of Paul illuminates the social, political, economic, and religious lives of those whom the apostle Paul addressed. Roman Ephesos, a likely setting for the household of Philemon, provides evidence of the slave trade. An inscription from Galatia seeks to restrain traveling Roman officials, illuminating how the travels of Paul, Cephas, and others may have disrupted communities. At Philippi, a donation list from a Silvanus cult provides evidence of abundant giving amid economic limitations, paralleling practices of local Christ followers. In Corinth, a landscape of grief includes monuments and bones, a context that illumines Corinthian practices of baptism on behalf of the dead and the provocative idea that one could live “as if not” mourning. Rome and the Letter to the Romans are the grounds to investigate ideas of time and race not only in the first century, when we find an Egyptian obelisk inserted as a timepiece into Augustus’s mausoleum complex, but also of Mussolini’s new Rome. Thessalonikē demonstrates how letters, legend, and cult are invented out of a love for Paul, after his death. The book articulates a method for bringing together biblical texts with archaeological remains in order to reconstruct the lives of the many adelphoi—brothers and sisters—whom Paul and his co-writers address. It is informed by feminist historiography and gains inspiration from thinkers like Claudia Rankine, Judith Butler, Giorgio Agamben, Wendy Brown, and Katie Lofton.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document