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Showing 1 - 22 of
22 matches in All Departments
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writing skin (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando; Contributions by Yanyun Chen, Huiting Pan
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R1,239
Discovery Miles 12 390
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Gleaming Man (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando, Lee Ching Lim; Contributions by Ruben Pang
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R674
Discovery Miles 6 740
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Cotton Candy (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando; Illustrated by Adeline Chang; Afterword by Lee Ching Lim
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R412
Discovery Miles 4 120
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Resisting Art (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando; Contributions by Natalie Christian Tan
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R414
Discovery Miles 4 140
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Making up with JB (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando; Photographs by John Wp Philips; Afterword by Marine Dupuis Baudrillard
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R411
Discovery Miles 4 110
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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in fidelity (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando; Designed by Yanyun Chen
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R969
Discovery Miles 9 690
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Writing Art (Paperback)
Alessandro De Francesco; Jeremy Fernando
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R552
R500
Discovery Miles 5 000
Save R52 (9%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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On Invisibility attempts to meditate on the relationality between
the seen and unseen, known and unknowable, particularly when in
relation with an other, when grappling - in touch with - another.
This text opens the dossier that, whilst seemingly antonyms,
invisibility is part of visibility; that each act of seeing is
fraught with the possibility of blindness. And more than that,
relationality with another is premised on this very unknowability.
Which is why, not only does one encounter jiu-jitsu through
practice, praxis; not only does one encounter jiu-jitsu through an
encounter with the other; part of it always escapes us, remains
enigmatic. Thus, not only is it arte suave, it is always also
potentially arte bela. So, even as we attempt to address the
question what is jiu-jitsu, part of it will always remain beyond
us. Which might be why we have no choice but to turn to art: for,
all that we know, can see, of jiu-jitsu will be fragments of it -
sketches.
Requiem for the Factory is a conversation between two forms of
writing: language, and light. This occurs in a tale that attempts
to explore the relationality of a self to her self through the
figure of a factory. Told through an "I" that refuses to remain
stable, one is never sure whether this is a moment when the tale is
recounted, recalled, or whether it is being told at the moment of
telling. And this is why this requiem has to be narrated. What is
foregrounded is not only the fact that memory, history, is
fictional, but more pertinently that the self-and the "I"-can only
be uttered, perhaps even known, through fictionality. This is not
to say that the self is imagined-unreal-but that the imaginary is
in the very fabric of reality itself. This is a tale of two
writings that are speaking to, and with, each other, whilst also
speaking in their own realms at the very same time.
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Poetry from Beyond the Grave (Paperback)
Francisco Candido Xavier; Afterword by Jeremy Fernando; Translated by Vitor Pequeno
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R602
R546
Discovery Miles 5 460
Save R56 (9%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Poetry from Beyond the Grave is the first English publication of a
large selection of poems by the Brazilian medium and Spiritist
leader Francisco Candido "Chico" Xavier. These poems, originally
collected in the volume Parnaso de Alem-Tumulo, were dictated to
Xavier by a variety of spirits of Brazilian poets from the
afterlife, as journeying souls or as witnesses of the spiritual
city Nosso Lar, "our house." Poetry from Beyond the Grave is a
veritable collection of haunted writing, in which poets present
their posthumous work as if they were alive. The brilliant
translation by Vitor Pequeno is supplemented by an extensive
afterword by Jeremy Fernando, who traces what it means to speak
through the other.
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On Blinking (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando, Sarah Brigid Hannis
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R521
R481
Discovery Miles 4 810
Save R40 (8%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"On Blinking" opens a dossier on seeing. It looks not only to the
epistemological sense of what it means to see or the hermeneutical
sense of what is the meaning of that which is seen but attends to
various sites of knowledge-photography, literature, and philosophy.
And in doing so, it questions the privileging of presence and sight
in Western thought. Thus, this book, through the essays- "Emerging
Sight, Emerging Blindness" (Brian Willems); "Augen, Blicke,
Statten" (Julia Holzl); "At the risk of love" (Jeremy Fernando);
and "Suspended in a Moving Night: Photography, or the Shiny
Relation Self-World" (Jessica Aliaga Lavrijsen)- attempts to
address the question what is seeing.
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Writing Death (Paperback)
Jeremy Fernando; Foreword by Avital Ronell
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R509
R466
Discovery Miles 4 660
Save R43 (8%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Ask not for whom the bell tolls... Eulogy: one of the many English
words combining legein (to gather together) and logos (the word,
the law). With eulogy though the speech-act itself is all important
(eu-) and its impossibility evident in a written work. The site of
the gathering together of words, of scattered sounds, disappears in
the act of writing, itself scatter -- all too forcefully
underlining the cause, the event of dispersion that creates the
need for gathering together. Jeremy Fernando s eulogy, this
particular eulogy, is called Writing Death, and it reminds us that
eulogy in its impossibility may well be the primary genre of
writing. Writing and death have always gone together, hence Plato s
suspicions of chirographic technologies. The author is absent, as
is the subject. The text brooks no questions and gives no answers.
Fernando s gathering of scatterings in the form of mini-meditations
unfolds the weaving of textus that makes writing possible and makes
death comprehensible in all of its paradoxical mystery and awe-ful
presence. His is a book of catalysts: use them with care. -- Ryan
Bishop, Professor of Global Arts and Politics, the Winchester
School of Art, the University of Southampton
Terrorism is usually regarded as the enemy of globalization and
capitalism. However this analysis completely misses the point as
terrorism is precisely what allows globalization to exist: by
ensuring that the fantasy of total exchangeability is never
fulfilled, terrorism sustains the logic of capital itself.
Reflections on (T)error is a meditation on the problems of
confining the thinking of terrorism within the logic of exchange.
This logic keeps us in the cycle of exchangeability: we remain
within the game of surplus value and one-upsmanship; human lives
are the very stake with which this game is played. It is only
through looking at terror as such - as a singularity - that this
cycle might be avoided; not by opposition nor by distancing oneself
from it, but rather by complete immersion in terror itself. This
book seeks to respond to the need to reconstitute the question of
terrorism from a philosophical standpoint. It is addressed to
researchers that think the realms of terrorism, post-structural
philosophy and media philosophy.
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