The Misinterpellated Subject /
James R. Martel complicates Louis Althusser's theory of interpellation, using historical and literary analyses ranging from the Haitian Revolution to Ta-Nehisi Coates to examine the political and revolutionary potential inherent in the instances when people heed the state's call that was n...
| Autor principal: | |
|---|---|
| Formato: | Electrónico eBook | 
| Idioma: | Inglés | 
| Publicado: | Durham :
        
      Duke University Press,    
    
      2017. | 
| Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE. | 
| Temas: | |
| Acceso en línea: | Texto completo | 
                Tabla de Contenidos: 
            
                  - From "Hey, you there!" to "Wait up!" : the workings (and unworkings) of interpellation
- "Men are born free and equal in rights" : historical examples of interpellation and misinterpellation
- "Tiens, un negre" : Fanon and the refusal of colonial subjectivity
- "[A person] is something that shall be overcome" : the misinterpellated messiah, or how Nietzsche saves us from salvation
- "Come, come!" : Bartleby and Lily Briscoe as Nietzschean subjects
- "Consent to not be a single being" : resisting identity, confronting the law in Kafka's Amerika, Ellison's Invisible man, and Coates's Between the world and me
- "I can believe" : breaking the circuits of interpellation in Von Trier's Breaking the waves.
 


