Essays about: "Creative ambiguity"

Found 3 essays containing the words Creative ambiguity.

  1. 1. 'No Way Out': Monologic Madness in László Krasznahorkai's War and War

    University essay from Stockholms universitet/Engelska institutionen

    Author : Axel Lindner Olsson; [2023]
    Keywords : Alienation; ambiguity; madness; monologue; verbal nihilism;

    Abstract : In the attempt to let it speak its own name, authors of fiction have since the turn of the 20th century developed increasingly nuanced representations of madness. Such complicated productions of literary madness, I suggest, can be understood in terms of a rich fusion of philosophical inquiry and narratology. READ MORE

  2. 2. The Impact of Creative Ambiguity - A Case Study of the Aftermath of the Kosovo-Serbia Brussels Agreement 2013

    University essay from Malmö universitet/Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS)

    Author : Minja Odai; [2020]
    Keywords : Creative ambiguity; peace agreements; post-conflict reconciliation; Kosovo and Serbia; normalisation of relations;

    Abstract : Creative ambiguity as a negotiation strategy is used often in peace agreements and refers to when ambiguities are used in agreements to serve as a positive motivation to get over obstacles. While it has many positive impacts, the use of creative ambiguity also often times shifts the burden of the negotiation phase to the implementations phase, and thus can result into agreements that are not implemented as well as plummeting the relations between the parties affected. READ MORE

  3. 3. Dispatches from Greece: ‘‘We were sleeping as Individuals and we woke up as Citizens’’

    University essay from Lunds universitet/LUMID International Master programme in applied International Development and Management

    Author : Styliani-Myrsini Kazakou; [2015]
    Keywords : radical democratic politics; development; public private sphere; autonomy; Castoriadis; Skouries; Chalkidiki; politicisation; Greece; austerity; Social Sciences; Philosophy and Religion;

    Abstract : The universalistic understanding of the subject embedded in the Liberal and Marxist traditions together with contrasting accounts of unconstrained agency fail to explain the contingencies of ground responses that call for social change. The paper makes a case for the opening of the understanding of the human subject when placed in the theoretical terrain of radical political philosophy elaborated by thinkers such as C. READ MORE