{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Context XXI","provider_url":"http:\/\/contextxxi.org","title":"Captive Words\n","author_name":"Mustapha&nbsp;Khayati \u25aa \nKen&nbsp;Knabb (translation)","width":"1200","height":"800","url":"https:\/\/licra.at\/captive-words.html","html":"\u003Ch4 class='title'\u003E\u003Ca href='https:\/\/licra.at\/captive-words.html'\u003ECaptive Words\n\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/h4\u003E\u003Cblockquote class='spip'\u003EPopular assumptions, due to what they conceal, work for the dominant organization of life. One such assumption is the notion that language is not dialectical, thereby implying that all use of dialectics should be rejected. But in fact nothing is more clearly subject to dialectics than language, since it is a living reality. Thus, every critique of the old world has been made in the language of that world, yet directed against it and therefore automatically in a different language.&nbsp;\u003Ca href=\"..\/captive-words.html\" class=' pts_suite'\u003E(...)\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/blockquote\u003E\n"}