unpower
English
editEtymology 1
editNoun
editunpower (uncountable)
- Lack of power; weakness.
- 1995, Kenneth Maly, The Path of Archaic Thinking:
- Paradoxically, it is this unpower that proceeds to produce the suppressive superpower of metaphysics and that inscribes in Sallis' s work or in his "deconstructive" strategy — I would even say, in his hyperdeconstructive strategy — [...]
- 1996, Bradley S. Epps, Significant violence:
- I have referred to Makbara 's (lost) inspiration as 'unpower', a term that I take from Derrida's reading of Artaud. As Derrida explains, unpower is not simply a lack of power, not merely impotence or verbal sterility; unpower is actually inspiration [...]
- 2015, Hent de Vries, Nils F. Schott, Love and Forgiveness for a More Just World:
- But what does it mean to question the question of the principle of reason? Here, it seems to me, we may risk introducing the concept (but is it a concept?) of unpower.
Etymology 2
editFrom un- (reversive prefix) + power.
Verb
editunpower (third-person singular simple present unpowers, present participle unpowering, simple past and past participle unpowered)
- (transitive) To remove the power from; power down or power off
- 2010, Deron Rennick, The Webscrolls of Dim Sorcery:
- “Desperate to retrieve the webscrolls and unpower the staff, which could only be done by tossing it into The Saline Sea, [...]”