In this Issue
Since 1992 Common Knowledge has opened lines of communication among schools of thought in the academy, as well as between the academy and the community of thoughtful people outside its walls. Common Knowledge has formed a new intellectual model, one based on conversation and cooperation rather than on metaphors (adopted from war and sports) of "sides" that one must "take." The pages of Common Knowledge regularly challenge the ways we think about scholarship and its relevance to humanity.
published by
Duke University Pressviewing issue
Volume 8, Issue 3, Fall 2002Table of Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- pp. 608-610
Columns
Symposium
Peace and Mind:
Seriatim Symposium on Dispute, Conflict, and Enmity
Part 3: Diffidence, Humility, Weakness, and Other Strengths
- Mantra: Rather than Discourse
- pp. 516-525
Book Reviews
Little Reviews
- Life in Common (review)
- pp. 548-549
Delayed Book Review
- Dostoevsky's Derrida
- pp. 555-567
Fiction and Poetry
Untranslated Modenists
- In Praise of Cycles
- pp. 568-570
- Four Descriptions
- pp. 571-581
Articles
Poets on Poetry
- At Stake: Poetry in the Western World
- pp. 595-607