| Teresa de Lauretis - Literary Criticism - 1984 - 238 pages
...exclusively her own even though others might have "similar" experiences; but rather in the general sense of a process by which, for all social beings, subjectivity...reality, and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, even originating in, oneself) those relations—material, economic, and interpersonal—which... | |
| Richard Dellamora - Social Science - 1990 - 296 pages
...exclusively her own even though others might have "similar" experiences; but rather in the general sense of a process by which, for all social beings, subjectivity...reality, and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, even originating in, oneself) those relations—material, economic, and interpersonal—which... | |
| Sally Robinson - Social Science - 1991 - 262 pages
...as Teresa de Lauretis puts it, experience is the process through which “one places oneself [and] is placed in social reality, and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, even originating in, oneself) those relations—material, economic, and interpersonal—which... | |
| Kang Liu, Xiaobing Tang - Literary Criticism - 1993 - 332 pages
...close to Teresa de Lauretis' formulation of “experience”: Through that process [ie, experience] one places oneself or is placed in social reality,...and interpersonal—which are in fact social and, in a larger perspective, historical. The process is continuous, its achievement unending or daily renewed.... | |
| Henry Abelove, Michèle Aina Barale, David M. Halperin - Literary Criticism - 1993 - 696 pages
...Lauretis's redefinition of experience exposes the workings of this ideology. “Experience,” she writes, is the process by which, for all social beings, subjectivity is constructed. Through than process one places oneself or is placed in social reality, and so perceives and comprehends as... | |
| Myriam Yvonne Jehenson - Literary Criticism - 1995 - 228 pages
...(Beverley, MC, IS). But they still continue to write. Epilogue Experience, Teresa de Lauretis reminds us, “is the process by which, for all social beings,...reality and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, originating in oneself) those relations—material, economic, and interpersonal—which... | |
| Terrence J. McDonald - History - 1996 - 432 pages
...Lauretis's redefinition of experience exposes the workings of this ideology. "Experience," she writes, is the process by which, for all social beings, subjectivity...reality and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, originating in oneself) those relations—material, economic, and interpersonal— which... | |
| Christopher Castiglia - Biography & Autobiography - 1996 - 274 pages
...critical revision of social reality, undertaken in two stages. In the first, a woman "places [herself] or is placed in social reality, and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, even originating in, oneself) those relations— material, economic, and interpersonal—which... | |
| Christopher Castiglia - Biography & Autobiography - 1996 - 280 pages
...critical revision of social reality, undertaken in two stages. In the first, a woman "places [herself] or is placed in social reality, and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, even originating in, oneself) those relations— material, economic, and interpersonal—which... | |
| Beverley Skeggs - Social Science - 1997 - 204 pages
...either in time or place. Foucault (1974) argues that being is historically constituted as experience. Experience is the process by which, for all social...reality, and so perceives and comprehends as subjective (referring to, even originating in, oneself) those relations - material, economic and interpersonal... | |
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