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About The Book
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In this new book Marko Zlomislic argues that Slavoj Zizeks work does not contain any sort of radical emancipatory project especially as it passes through the ideology of communism and Lacanian psychoanalysis. The evidence for the failure of communism is vast and includes the more than six hundred mass graves recently located in Zizeks homeland of Slovenia. Zlomislic demonstrates that the way out of the capitalist dilemma is not a repetition of communism but a return to the late medieval notion of haecceity or individual thisness that was rejected by modernity. Haecceity or the indescribable and indefinite here and now of the person shows that the late medieval Franciscans were already postmodernists. It is no wonder that the totalitarianism of the modernist Hegel is embraced by thinkers such as Zizek Badiou Hardt Negri and Laclau and was already rejected by Leibnitz Kierkegaard Nietzsche Levinas Deleuze and Derrida. This important book shows that Zizeks work must be rejected because it does not uphold the dignity worth and uniqueness of the person. Marko Zlomislic engages Zizek very forcefully in this work from a Fransciscan-Derridean point of view and from personal and family experience in the troubled Balkans exposing especially Zizeks nostalgia for totalitarian dystopias. --Jean-Francois Methot professor faculty of Philosophy Dominican University College Marko Zlomislic is professor of philosophy at Conestoga College in Kitchener Ontario. He is the author of Jacques Derridas Aporetic Ethics (2004).