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231 Notes There are two sets of abbreviations I use when citing certain works. All citations of Freud, in reference to the Standard Edition, are abbreviated as SE, followed by the volume number and the page number (e.g., Freud, SE 21: 154). The abbreviation system for Lacan’s seminars is a little more complicated. All seminars are abbreviated S, followed by the Roman numeral of the volume number. For those seminars available in English (seminars 1, 2, 3, 7, 11, 17, and 20), I give the page numbers of the volumes as published by W. W. Norton and Company (e.g., Lacan, SXI 256). For those seminars published in French in book form but not translated into English (seminars 4, 5, 8, 10, 16, and 23), the listed page numbers refer to the French editions published by Éditions du Seuil (e.g., Lacan, SX 52). As for the rest of the seminars, the dates of the seminar sessions (month/day/year) are listed in place of page numbers (e.g., Lacan, SXIX 5/10/72). Preface 1. Benjamin 1969, 257. 2. Benjamin 1969, 258. 3. Ross 2002, 2–3, 11, 73–74, 96–99, 109–13. 4. Marx 1977a, 209–10; Marx and Engels 1977a, 223–24. 5. Mao 1967b, 37. 6. Benjamin 1969, 258–59. 7. Stalin 1940, 13, 40–41, 43–44. 8. Bensaïd 1990, 29–30, 216–17, 231–32. 9. Benjamin 1969, 254. 10. Benjamin 1969, 253–54, 262, 264. 11. Bensaïd 1990, 222, 249. 12. Benjamin 1969, 253. 13. Gramsci 2000, 208, 212–17. 14. Gramsci 2000, 190–202. 15. Weizman 2006. 16. The Economist 2006. 17. Jameson 1991, xii, xiv–xv. 18. Lenin 2002b, 117–18, 121–23. 19. Badiou 1982, 333; Badiou 1985b, 95–97. 20. Bosteels 2005b, 578, 581. 232 N O T E S T O P A G E S x v i i i – x x i x 21. Meillassoux 2008b. 22. Badiou 2005b, 162–63. 23. Badiou 1975, 21, 40–41, 76–79; Badiou, Bellassen, and Mossot 1978, 46, 88. 24. Badiou 1985b, 67–69, 76–78, 112–15. 25. Badiou 1998, 10–12. 26. Lenin 2002c, 145, 156. 27. Badiou 2006i, 153, 155, 158. 28. Johnston 2008, 126–28. 29. Marx 1976, 103. 30. Lenin 2002a, 16. 31. Marcuse 1955, 5, 133–34, 136; Marcuse 1970, 63–64. 32. Bensaïd 1990, 74–75, 190, 224–25. 33. Badiou 2005f, xxxix, 10–11, 23, 55, 61–62. 34. Rancière 1991, 15–18, 34–36, 71–73, 101–3, 105–6, 109; Rancière 2006, 44, 46–49, 59–62, 78–82, 84, 94–97. 35. Badiou 1999a, 66, 79–80; Badiou 2005d, 14. 36. Hegel 1967, 13. 37. Balibar 2007, 40–41. 38. Badiou 2007d, 9. 39. Bosteels 2005b, 596. 40. Badiou 1975, 81; Badiou 1985b, 84; Badiou 2003a, 122–23. 41. Badiou 1975, 17–19. 42. Jameson 1981, 9. 43. Marx 1977c, 572. 44. Balibar 2007, 1–2, 4, 6, 108, 116–17. 45. Marx 1977d, 583–84; Marx 1977e, 593. 46. Lukács 1971, 1, 3–4, 12–15. 47. Lukács 1971, 24. 48. Žižek 2008, 3. 49. Lenin 1969, 25. Introduction 1. Žižek 1993, 4; Johnston 2005a, 85. 2. Badiou 2006i, 588. 3. Badiou 2006i, 588. 4. Badiou 2004a, 9. 5. Badiou 2005e, 40–41. 6. L’Organisation Politique 2001. 7. Badiou 1985b, 12, 108–9; Badiou 2001b, 95–96; Badiou 2003h, 86–87; Badiou 2003e, 73–74; Badiou 2003a, 124; Badiou 2005f, 122, 144–45, 149–50; Badiou 2006k, 321; Badiou 2006e. 8. Žižek 1998, 51–52; Žižek 2002e, 297; Žižek 2004c, 75–76. [18.224.73.125] Project MUSE (2024-04-25 18:18 GMT) 233 N O T E S T O P A G E S x x i x – 8 9. Žižek 2001e, 73–76; Žižek 2006a, 328. 10. Bosteels 2005a, 224–25. 11. Žižek 1999e, 128–29; Žižek 2001a, 117; Žižek 2002f, 101–2; Johnston 2005a, 85. 12. Badiou 1985b, 18, 67; Badiou 2003h, 73; Badiou 2003g, 181; Badiou 2005f, 23. 13. Hallward 2005, 784. 14. Badiou 1999b, 114–15; Badiou 2003j, 57–58, 70–71; Badiou 2003g, 181; Badiou 2003a, 122–23; Tarby 2005b, 27, 33; Tarby 2005a, 10. 15. Badiou 1975, 26, 41, 110; Badiou 1982, 21, 150–51. 16. Badiou 1999b, 115. 17. Hallward 2003, xxxiii, 37, 50, 250, 284–85, 371; Johnston 2003; Johnston 2005a, 123. Chapter 1, §1...

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