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Síða 132
It is not " you " ( toi ) , but “ your voice ” that she listens to . This is a phenomenological truth that is only accentuated by the intervention of the telephone : I never hear or listen to you as such ; I can only listen to what I ...
It is not " you " ( toi ) , but “ your voice ” that she listens to . This is a phenomenological truth that is only accentuated by the intervention of the telephone : I never hear or listen to you as such ; I can only listen to what I ...
Síða 135
And it is this other , this second person , who has called first : “ You call me , " the first person says , “ I listen to you ” : “ Tu me téléphones . Je t'écoute . " 52 a This is apparently a clear , and familiar , dichotomy .
And it is this other , this second person , who has called first : “ You call me , " the first person says , “ I listen to you ” : “ Tu me téléphones . Je t'écoute . " 52 a This is apparently a clear , and familiar , dichotomy .
Síða 136
Someone is speaking here , someone says , out loud , “ I am listening . ” “ I am listening to you . ” Can one listen while talking ? Can a listening subject ever be simply identified with a speaking subject ? And can one ever listen to ...
Someone is speaking here , someone says , out loud , “ I am listening . ” “ I am listening to you . ” Can one listen while talking ? Can a listening subject ever be simply identified with a speaking subject ? And can one ever listen to ...
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Efni
Jacques Derrida Allegorical Portrait | 21 |
Questce qui arrive?Two Texts Divided in Two After | 54 |
Hélène Cixous translation by Peggy Kamuf | 123 |
Höfundarréttur | |
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Common terms and phrases
according already animal appears arrive autobiography become beginning blindness body Chicago Cixous comes comparative literature concept constitution course death democracy difference effect English essay event everything example eyes face fact figure force French ghost give given going hand happens hear Hélène human Ibid Jacques Derrida keys language least less listen literary living logic longer look marked means mourning never object once original Paris performative perhaps person philosophical play plurality political possible present proper name question quotation receive reference reflection relation remains response scene secret seems seen sense sentence signifier singular someone speak specter spectral speech Stanford structure talking telephone thing thought tion trace trans translation turn University University Press visible voice writing