"We say Revolution": Review of "Un apartamento en Urano. Crónicas del Cruce" of Paul B. Preciado
Every time one reads Paul, he can claim that death causes the biological to succumb, but that what is said is irremediably inscribed in the consciences of those who still remain standing. Foucault, mainly, and then Derrida are alive in Paul, in his iconoclasm and in his permanent genealogy. Perhaps...
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| Formato: | Artículo revista |
| Lenguaje: | Español |
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Cátedra B de Problemas Epistemológicos de la Psicología de la Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
2020
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| Acceso en línea: | https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/heterocronias/article/view/29753 |
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| Sumario: | Every time one reads Paul, he can claim that death causes the biological to succumb, but that what is said is irremediably inscribed in the consciences of those who still remain standing. Foucault, mainly, and then Derrida are alive in Paul, in his iconoclasm and in his permanent genealogy. Perhaps "An apartment on Uranus. Chronicles of the crossing "book published by Anagrama in 2019, be closer to Foucault for the diversity of themes developed. With the plasticity that characterizes him, Paul looms not only over the world’s techno-heterosexual apparatus, but also over all sorts of implements in trade with it. All topics are approached with an exquisite literary structure and a deep intellectual richness. From the role of the states of the European Union, to single-parent adoption, through criticism of racist, class-based and aporophobic feminism. Criticism that is not few affronts from various sectors of mainstream feminism. However, Paul knows that the game of "internal" war, the fratricidal war, only works to perpetuate the primacy of heteropatriarcado and necropolitica. |
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