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It is the Connection of Desire to Reality that Possesses Revolutionary Force, or, Why I Decided Not to Commit Suicide, After All
- Author(s):
- Eileen Joy (see profile)
- Date:
- 2016
- Group(s):
- Cultural Studies, Digital Humanists, Feminist Humanities, Public Humanities
- Subject(s):
- Open access publishing, Scholarly publishing, Academic freedom
- Item Type:
- Blog Post
- Tag(s):
- cultural commons, self-care, collectives, hospitality, Public humanities, Open-access publishing, Academic publishing
- Permanent URL:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/zdsw-jc47
- Abstract:
- An expanded version of a talk presented at the Sub-conference of the Modern Language Association, “The Public and Its Privates,” Cheer-up Charlie’s, Austin, Texas, 7 January 2015, that ruminates both the difficulties of collective work as well as how various scholarly collectives create spaces of radical hospitality within which individual persons might feel more free to experiment, to take risks, and most importantly, to pursue in their work their desires, unencumbered by professional anxieties over whether or not those desires are legitimated in advance by what particular fields and institutions have already deemed as “proper” to themselves.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Published as:
- Online publication Show details
- Pub. URL:
- https://punctumbooks.com/blog/it-is-the-connection-of-desire-to-reality-that-possesses-revolutionary-force/
- Publisher:
- punctum books
- Pub. Date:
- January 13, 2016
- Website:
- https://punctumbooks.com/blog/
- Version:
- 1.0
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 4 years ago
- License:
- Attribution
- Share this:
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It is the Connection of Desire to Reality that Possesses Revolutionary Force, or, Why I Decided Not to Commit Suicide, After All