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  • Contributors

Matthew Anderson studied comparative literature at the University at Buffalo. He currently lives in Vancouver, BC.

Mauro Basaure is Professor at Escuela de Sociología, Universidad Nacional Andrés Bello, Santiago, Chile, and researcher in the Groupe de Sociologie Politique et Morale, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris and of the Laboratorio de Teoría Social y Política, Santiago. He is the author of several publications on social theory and political philosophy. This article results from an investigation financed by the Fondecyt Project 11100444.

Gérard Bensussan is professor of philosophy at the University of Strasbourg and researcher at the Paris Husserl Archives (Ecole Nationale Supérieure, 45, rue d'Ulm). He has translated Schelling, Rosenzweig, Feuerbach, and Moses Hess, and is the author of numerous articles. His major works—which have been translated into German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish—are Dictionnaire critique du marxisme (PUF, Quadrige, 1999, 3rd ed.), Moses Hess, la philosophie, le socialisme (PUF, 1985; 2nd ed. in 2004 with Olms Verlag, [End Page 265] Hildesheim-Zürich, New-York), Questions Juives (Osiris, 1988), La philosophie allemande dans la pensée juive (PUF, 1998), Franz Rosenzweig. Existence et philosophie (PUF, 2000), Le temps messianique. Temps historique et temps vécu (Vrin, 2001), Qu'est-ce que la philosophie juive ? (Desclée de Brouwer, 2004), Marx le sortant (Hermann, 2007), Ethique et expérience. Levinas politique (La Phocide, 2008), Dans la forme du monde. Sur Franz Rosenzweig (Hermann, 2009), and L'impatience des langues (with D. Cohen-Levinas, Hermann, 2010).

Petar Bojanić, professor of philosophy, is director of the Centre for Ethics, Law, and Applied Philosophy as well as of the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory (Belgrade, Serbia). He is a research fellow at the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities (London). After completing his Ph.D., "The (Last) War and the Institution of Philosophy," under the supervision of Jacques Derrida and Etienne Balibar, he taught at Cornell University (USA), University of Aberdeen (UK), and Belgrade University (Serbia). He is the author of the following books: Carl Schmitt and Jacques Derrida (1995), Figures of Sovereignty (2007), Provocations (2008), Homeopathies (2009), Border, Knowledge, Sacrifice (2009) and World Governance (with J. Babic, 2010). (http://www.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/bojanic.html)

Ricardo Camargo is Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Chile and Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University Andrés Bello. He is the author of El sublime retorno de la ideología: De Platón a Žižek (Editorial Metales Pesados, 2011) and has published articles in such journals as Contemporary Political Theory, Latin American Perspectives, Revista de Ciencia Política, and Ideas y Valores.

Marc Crépon is Director of Research at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and Professor of philosophy at the École Normale Supérieure (Paris). He is the author of several books, most recently Le consentement meurtrier (Cerf, 2012).

Ron Estes is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Comparative Literature at the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he is finishing a dissertation on Nostalgia and the Uncanny in the Nineteenth-Century [End Page 266] British and American Gothic Novel. He has translated essays by Jean-Luc Nancy, Eva Geulen, Gerard Wajcman and Willy Apollon. He currently resides in Seville, Spain.

Jennifer Fay is Associate Professor of Film Studies and English at Vanderbilt University where she also directs the Film Studies program. She is author of Theaters of Occupation: Hollywood and the Reeducation of Postwar Germany (Minnesota, 2008) and co-author of Film Noir: Hard-Boiled Modernity and the Cultures of Globalization (Routledge, 2009), in addition to articles published in Cultural Critique, Journal of Visual Culture, Discourse, and Cinema Journal. She is currently writing a book tentatively titled Cinema and the Inhospitable World on environmental disenchantment and film theory.

Thomas Hippler is associate professor at the Institute for Political Studies (Sciences Po) of University of Lyon, France, and senior research associate to the Leverhulme Programme The Changing Character of War, University of Oxford. He is the author of Citizens, Soldiers, and National Armies: Military Service in France and Prussia, 1789-1830 (London, Routledge, 2007) and of a...

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