欢迎访问大通彩票   

狄一多

发布者:辛香英发布时间:2021-08-06浏览次数:7075

Prof. Dr. Iddo Dickmann (狄一多)

Associate Professor of Philosophy and Jewish Studies, Nanjing University




Department of Philosophy and Religion, NJU

The Diane and Guilford Glazer Institute for Jewish and Israel Studies, NJU

Area of specialization: Continental Philosophy, Jewish Philosophy, Rabbinic Literature, Aesthetics

Area of competence: Jewish Literature, Jewish History, Israel Studies

Email: iddo_dickmann@nju.edu.cn; ido.dnn@gmail.com

Address: Department of Philosophy, Xue Guanglin Building, Room 424. Xianlin Campus, Nanjing, 210023



Educational background

PhD Bar-Ilan University

MA Hebrew University of Jerusalem

BA Hebrew University of Jerusalem


Personal profile

I joined the Department in 2021, having previously taught and conducted research at the University of Colorado Boulder, Penn-State University, Cambridge University, The Catholic University of Louvain, and Vilnius University.Israeli born, my degrees are from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Bar-Ilan University, and I am a graduate of Har-Etzion Talmudic College. My areas of specialization are Continental Philosophy (especially contemporary French Thought), and Jewish Philosophy (especially Rabbinic). In my research I put these three fields into dialogue, and I am entrusted with teaching courses in both. My publications include, among other things, a monograph with SUNY Press entitled The Little Crystalline Seed: The Ontological Significance of Mise en abyme in Post-Heideggerian Thought (SUNY Press)

Research interests

In my monograph and subsequent publications, I have argued that Deleuze, Blanchot, Derrida, Levinas, Foucault and Bergson, with Kant, Leibniz and Heidegger as precursors, invoked the concept of mise en ebyme, or aesthetic self-reference, from Poetics, to use it as a paradigm shift in Philosophy. My research into Rabbinic Thought shows it to consist in types of mises en abyme, known to neither Poetics nor Philosophy. My upcoming research-project “Poetics and the Logic of Life” will apply the phenomenology and poetics of self-reference to Biosemiotics and Origin of Life theories.   

Publications

Monographs

  • Dickmann, I. (2019) The Little Crystalline Seed: The Ontological Significance of the Mise en abyme in Post-Heideggerian Thought. New York: State University of New York Press. SUNY Series: “Intersections: Philosophy and Critical Theory”, edited by Rodolph Gasché.


Papers in international refereed journals

  • Dickmann, I. (2015) “’The Book as Assemblage with the Outside’ – The Rhizomatic Book as a Radical Case of Open Work.” Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, 46(1): 16-32

  • Dickmann, I. (2017) “Using Mise en abyme to Differentiate Deleuze and Derrida.” Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, 48(1):63-80

  • Dickmann, I. (2018) “The Sefer as a Challenge to Reception Theories.” Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 26 (1): 67-93

  • Dickmann, I. (2018) “’Infinite Responsibility’ and the Pitfall of Negation: A Deleuzian Critique of Levinas”. Philosophy Today, 62(3): 765-783

  • Dickmann, I. (2019) “The Gift of Get: A Derridean Reading of Tractate Gittin”. The Heythrop Journal, 61: 903-912

  • Dickmann, I. (accepted, forthcoming) “Tractate Shabbat and the Phenomenology of Play”. Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses

  • Dickmann, I. (accepted, forthcoming) “Double-Mirror Gaze, Transcoded Testimony, and Disqualified Witnesses in the Talmud”. Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy

  • Dickmann, I. (accepted, forthcoming) “Infames, Roman Judicial Theatre, and the Mimesis of Process”, Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy


Chapters in edited collections

  • Dickmann, I. (2016) “Mise en abyme and Levinas’s ‘Infinite Responsibility’” in Emmanuel Levinas: a Radical Thinker in the Time of Crisis, R. Serpytye(ed.), Vilnius University Press, 131-138


Courses:

Graduate:

  • Introduction to Jewish Philosophy

  • Introduction to Rabbinic Thought and Literature


Undergraduate:

  • French Thought: From Existentialism to Post-Structuralism


Language Skills:

  • Hebrew: Native

  • English: Proficient

  • French: Proficient

  • Spanish: Independent

  • Arabic: Independent

  • Mandarin: Basic-intermediary (HSK2)