“There’s a vastness in Woolf, an inexhaustibility and an eagerness, that in turn sparks procreativity in others”
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“There’s a vastness in Woolf, an inexhaustibility and an eagerness, that in turn sparks procreativity in others”
Foucault’s critique of power and knowledge shaped poststructuralism, yet its rejection of truth risks becoming its own orthodoxy. To remain...
This is Part 4 of a 4-part series on the academic, and specifically philosophical study of disagreement. In Part 1...
This is Part 3 of a 4-part series on the academic, and specifically philosophical study of disagreement. In Part 1...
This is Part 2 of a 4-part series on the academic, and specifically philosophical study of disagreement. In Part 1...
To Harold Bloom, he was an “American Proust.” To New York magazine, he was “THE GENIUS.” To himself, Harold Brodkey...
Wittgenstein’s self-recriminations: He was an ambivalent Jew, a brutal teacher, a bad soldier, an occasional masturbator
"There’s a vastness in Woolf, an inexhaustibility and an eagerness, that in turn sparks procreativity in others"
philosophybits: “If it is true to say of the lazy that they kill time, then it is greatly to be...