Essays about: "différance"
Found 4 essays containing the word différance.
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1. The risky reality to legally exist - A critical analysis on the notion of legal identity in International Human Rights Law
University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionen; Lunds universitet/Juridiska fakultetenAbstract : Around 20% of all people worldwide (1.5 billion) do not have an official and legally recognized document as proof of their identity. This affect, for example, their right to vote, to open a bank account, obtain formal employment or seek legal compensation. READ MORE
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2. Studies of a neutral Higgs boson produced in gluon-gluon fusion and vector boson fusion
University essay from Uppsala universitet/HögenergifysikAbstract : This paper presents an outline of the generation of mass for the massive Standard Model particles (fermions, $W^\pm$, $Z^0$) through electroweak symmetry breaking via the Higgs mechanism, and how the Higgs boson emerges from this framework. A Monte Carlo study was done on the decay $H\rightarrow\tau\tau$, with one leptonically and one hadronically decaying tau, with two different production channels for the $H$, gluon-gluon fusion (gg) and vector boson fusion (VBF), at $\sqrt s = 7\tev$ with a Higgs mass $m_H = 120\gev$. READ MORE
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3. A Manifold of Re-presentation : Derrida's Reassessment of Transcendental Aesthetics
University essay from Institutionen för kultur och kommunikationAbstract : This essay attempts to outline Jacques Derrida’s envisaged rewriting of transcendental aesthetics, hinted at in De la grammatologie. Focusing mainly on the texts published during the 1960’s (especially La voix et le phénomène) and the early 1970’s, I try to situate Derrida’s thought within the horizon of transcendental philosophy. READ MORE
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4. "I Really Am a Stranger to Myself": A Lacanian Reading of Identity in John Banville's Eclipse
University essay from Institutionen för språk och litteratur, SOLAbstract : This essay engages in a Lacanian reading of identity in John Banville’s Eclipse and argues that the protagonist Alex Cleave illustrates certain of Jacques Lacan’s ideas concerning subjectivity and the subject. Alex Cleave has a fragmented sense of identity and experiences alienation as well as loss and lack of authenticity. READ MORE