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Zōon Logon Ekhon: (Dis)possessing an Echo of Barbarism

Zōon Logon Ekhon: (Dis)possessing an Echo of Barbarism <p>abstract:</p><p><i>Zōon logon ekhon</i> echoes. Across the terrain of philosophy and rhetoric, it echoes as an echo, an expression that does not come from where it is alleged to come and which these two fields may not have in the way that they have so long claimed to have it. In the midst of <i>zōon logon ekhon</i> there abides an unasked and pressing question of possession, a question of how to bring the (dis)possession of language to recognizability.</p> http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Philosophy and Rhetoric Penn State University Press

Zōon Logon Ekhon: (Dis)possessing an Echo of Barbarism

Philosophy and Rhetoric , Volume 50 (4) – Nov 28, 2017

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Publisher
Penn State University Press
Copyright
Copyright © The Pennsylvania State University.
ISSN
1527-2079

Abstract

<p>abstract:</p><p><i>Zōon logon ekhon</i> echoes. Across the terrain of philosophy and rhetoric, it echoes as an echo, an expression that does not come from where it is alleged to come and which these two fields may not have in the way that they have so long claimed to have it. In the midst of <i>zōon logon ekhon</i> there abides an unasked and pressing question of possession, a question of how to bring the (dis)possession of language to recognizability.</p>

Journal

Philosophy and RhetoricPenn State University Press

Published: Nov 28, 2017

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