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Eminent sociologist and author of Transgression (2003), Chris Jenks provides an essential introduction to transgression as a cultural concept. He explores its philosophical roots, its emergence in the radical uncertainty of the early 20th century, and how it came to be most closely associated with the provocative writings of the French intellectual Georges Bataille.
Eminent sociologist and author of Transgression (2003), Chris Jenks provides an essential introduction to transgression as a cultural concept. He explores its philosophical roots, its emergence in the radical uncertainty of the early 20th century, and how it came to be most closely associated with the provocative writings of the French intellectual Georges Bataille.
Transgression: The Concept
Jenks, Chris (author)
Architectural Design ; 83 ; 20-23
2013-11-01
4 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Friedrich Nietzsche , Post‐structuralism and Postmodernism , Sigmund Freud , Georges Bataille , Michel Foucault , Surrealists , Allan Stoekl , Albert Camus , Alexandre Kojève , Jean‐François Lyotard , Georg Hegel , Michail Bakhtin , John Jervis , Twin Towers , J Robert Oppenheimer , Antonin Artaud, Arthur Rimbaud, Guy Debord , Marquis de Sade
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