摘要:The present article questions the function of testimony to desconstrution of biopolitical violence, analyzing the memory as restraint to these violence as much as a fundamental instrument to elaborate the traumatic pass, objecting no repetition of barbarian acts, as well as the necessity of find the other, opening to a ethic posture founded in otherness.
其他摘要:The present article questions the function of testimony to desconstrution of biopolitical violence, analyzing the memory as restraint to these violence as much as a fundamental instrument to elaborate the traumatic pass, objecting no repetition of barbarian acts, as well as the necessity of find the other, opening to a ethic posture founded in otherness.