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  1. Strata, Narrative, and Space in Ici et ailleurs.Kamil Lipiński - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (2):173-196.
    This article examines the pedagogic vision of audiovisual archives in Ici et ailleurs ( Here and Elsewhere, 1974/1978) (shot by Sonimage and drawn from the abandoned project Jusqu’à la Victoire [1970]) in terms of the stratification of images and sounds. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze and Michel Foucault, Tom Conley writes that a diagram that depends upon the division between the visible and the enunciable may be comprehended in terms of a map and as a line of forces. Such strata can (...)
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  • Interstitial Life: Subtractive Vitalism in Whitehead and Deleuze.Steven Shaviro - 2010 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 4 (1):107-119.
    Deleuze and Whitehead are both centrally concerned with the problem of how to reconcile the emergence of the New with the evident continuity and uniformity of the world through time. They resolve this problem through the logic of what Deleuze calls ‘double causality’, and Whitehead the difference between efficient and final causes. For both thinkers, linear cause-and-effect coexists with a vital capacity for desire and decision, guaranteeing that the future is not just a function of the past. The role of (...)
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  • Touch, Time and Technics.Dave Boothroyd - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (2-3):330-345.
    The development of immersive media-communication environments, and their theorization in terms of the `haptic', calls for a reconsideration of the relationship between sensuality and the ethics of contact. For the most part, the cultural theorization of the virtual which remains preoccupied with the visual has tended to limit its scope to the paradoxes, politics and ethics of representation. Much of media and cultural studies work, for instance, has adopted, directly or indirectly, the traditional visual and ocularcentric paradigm in its analyses (...)
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  • Rhythm and Refrain: In Between Philosophy and Arts (2016).Jurate Baranova (ed.) - 2016 - Vilnius: Lithuanian University of educational sciences.
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  • The Sublime Conditions of Contemporary Art.Stephen Zepke - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (1):73-83.
    Deleuze's relationship to Kant is intricate and fundamental, given that Deleuze develops his transcendental philosophy of difference in large part out of Kant's work. In doing so he utilises the moment of the sublime from the third Critique as the genetic model for the irruption of the faculties beyond their capture within common sense. In this sense, the sublime offers the model not only for transcendental genesis but also for aesthetic experience unleashed from any conditions of possibility. As a result, (...)
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  • Towards a Theory of Film Worlds.Daniel Yacavone - 2008 - Film-Philosophy 12 (2):83-108.
    Film critics and theorists often refer to the ‘worlds’ that films create, present, or embody,e.g. the world of Eraserhead or the world in Fanny and Alexander. Like the world of a novel or painting, the world of a film in thisprevalent use of the term denotes its represented content or setting, or whatever formaland thematic aspects distinguish it from other films in a pronounced and oftenimmediately recognisable way. Yet there is much more to be said in philosophical termsabout films as, (...)
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  • A sacrificial economy of the image: Lyotard on cinema.Ashley Woodward - 2014 - Angelaki 19 (4):141-154.
    :The theme of sacrifice appears in Jean-François Lyotard's writings on cinema not in terms of any representational content but in terms of the economy of the images from which a film is formally constructed. Sacrifice is here understood in a sense derived from Bataille, and related to his notions of general economy, and of sovereignty. Lyotard's writings on cinema have received some attention in English-language scholarship, but so far this attention has been focused almost exclusively on two essays which have (...)
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  • Introduction: Negotiating the Archival Turn in Beckett Studies.S. E. Wilmer - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (4):585-588.
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  • The Neurobiology of Sorcery: Deleuze and Guattari's Brain.Sean Watson - 1998 - Body and Society 4 (4):23-45.
    This article is intended to work on a number of different levels. First it is concerned with the brain-become-subject as hypothesized by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari in their book What is Philosophy?. It is concerned with demonstrating the convergence between Deleuze and Guattari's work and the claims of some contemporary neuro-biological theories of consciousness. In particular, I will be comparing Deleuze and Guattari's hypothesis to the work of Gerald Edelman and Daniel Dennett. Second, it is my contention that the (...)
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  • Cooking the Cosmic Soup: Vincent Moon's Altered States of Live Cinema.Amir Vudka - 2023 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 17 (4):561-582.
    The films and live cinema of Vincent Moon are considered in this chapter as ‘psychedelic’: a form of filmmaking and film performances that can open the doors of perception to invisible realms of percepts, affects and durations that are beyond or below ordinary human perception. According to Paul Schrader, films can evoke such spiritual dimensions, in particular through what he called the transcendental style of film, and what Gilles Deleuze termed the time-image. As an audio-visual ethnographer of world religions who (...)
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  • The question of the cinema.Bradford Vivian - 2005 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 19 (3):250-266.
    Terrance Malick's film _The Thin Red Line is notable for its inexorable tendency to undermine the ontological status of the very times, places, and people it portrays. The film consists in an unrelenting questioning of cinematic reality. Such questioning does not lead to definitive truth or thematic resolution but only to more questions, more incredulousness at the continual disclosure and withdrawal of difference and multiplicity in their own accord. The film thus adopts what one might call a Heideggerian posture of (...)
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  • The Delirium of Rationalism: Why Deleuze Invokes Spinoza and Leibniz.Florian Vermeiren - 2023 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 17 (1):55-83.
    Why does Deleuze rely so heavily on Spinoza and Leibniz? At first glance, his critique of representation and the traditional ‘image of thought’ seems to oppose him to rationalism. However, Deleuze says that when the ‘cry of rationalism’ is pursued until the end, rationalism becomes ‘delirious’. In such a state, it undermines the model of representation. This delirium is found in Spinoza and Leibniz's critique of generality and their conflation of essence and existence, through which they ruin the traditional mediation (...)
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  • Flat Film: Strategies of Depthlessness in Pleasantville and La Haine.Timotheus Vermeulen - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (2):168-183.
    In this essay I consider the device of depthlessness in film. I am interested in particular in the ways in which this device can determine, or at least raise questions about, the nature of the fictional world. Taking my cue from two films from the turn of the century – Gary Ross' 1998 film Pleasantville and Matthieu Kassovitz' 1995 La Haine – as well as, more broadly, arts historical and cultural theoretical debates, where rather more attention has been devoted to (...)
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  • Potentiality as a Life: Deleuze, Agamben, Beckett.Audronė Žukauskaitė - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (4):628-637.
    In Essays Critical and Clinical, Deleuze argues that Beckettian characters usually strive towards becoming imperceptible. This statement immediately poses another question: what is becoming imperceptible and where does it lead? How can we rid ourselves of ourselves? Paradoxically enough, Deleuze states that becoming imperceptible is life. The literal and self-evident meaning of life seems somehow incompatible with the image of dissolving and decaying characters in Beckett's works. Contrary to this self-evidence, the notion of life in Deleuze and Beckett should be (...)
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  • Deleuze and Kieślowski: On the Cinema of Exhaustion.Eddy Troy - 2017 - Film-Philosophy 21 (1):37-59.
    This article revisits Krzysztof Kieślowski's films in light of Gilles Deleuze's writings on cinema. Its central argument is that, while Kieślowski's films register what Deleuze calls exhausted life, or la vie épuisée, they also offer an affirmative response to exhaustion. Deleuze's articulation of exhaustion in the context of film emerges first in Cinema 2: The Time-Image, where the term is posited as the denial of life's capacity to transform itself. In the context of Kieślowski's films and the communist milieux from (...)
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  • Stjernfelt, Frederik. Diagrammatology: An Investigation on the Borderlines of Phenomenology, Ontology, and Semiotics: Springer, Netherlands, 2007, 506 pp, ISBN: 978-1-4020-5651-2. [REVIEW]Geoffrey Sykes - 2008 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 21 (3):297-301.
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  • From zigzag to affect, and back: Creation, life and friendship.Charles J. Stivale - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (1):25 – 33.
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  • Nietzsche on Film.Mark Steven - 2017 - Film-Philosophy 21 (1):95-113.
    This article tracks the many appearances of Friedrich Nietzsche throughout the history of cinema. It asks how cinema can do Nietzschean philosophy in ways that are unique to the medium. It also asks why the cinematic medium might be so pertinent to Nietzschean philosophy. Adhering to the implicit premise that, as Jacques Derrida once put it, ‘there is no totality to Nietzsche's text, not even a fragmentary or aphoristic one,’ the essay's mode of argument avoids reductive totalization and instead comprises (...)
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  • Netting Fins: A Deleuzian Exploration of Linguistic Invention in Virginia Woolf's The Waves.Jason Skeet - 2013 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (4):475-495.
    Linguistic invention is a key feature of Virginia Woolf's novel The Waves. An exploration of its innovative verbal and syntactic procedures can add to an understanding of Woolf's importance for the philosophical thought of Gilles Deleuze (and his sometime collaborator Félix Guattari). In A Thousand Plateaus, The Waves is used to exemplify an ontology of becoming. However, in their reference to The Waves, Deleuze and Guattari only draw attention to what they term the ‘vibrations, shifting borderlines’ between and across characters (...)
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  • Kiki and the ‘girl’: A Moment of Reading between Deleuze and Feminism.Ritu Sen Chaudhuri - 2018 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 12 (4):486-504.
    The essay reads as a moment of alliance – a moment of reading of two disparate things together. The event of alliance remains inspired by Gilles Deleuze's theorisations of becoming. This marks the coming together of unrelated things – one into the fold of another – without being subordinated in the process. It reads an anime, Kiki's Delivery Service, with Deleuze and Guattari's writings on ‘the girl’ – where the girl represented as ‘real’ in a fantasy meets the girl written (...)
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  • The role of intuition in thinking and learning: Deleuze and the pragmatic legacy.Inna Semetsky - 2004 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 36 (4):433–454.
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  • The Role of Intuition in Thinking and Learning: Deleuze and the pragmatic legacy.Inna Semetsky - 2004 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 36 (4):433-454.
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  • Becoming‐Language/Becoming‐Other: Whence ethics?Semetsky Inna - 2004 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 36 (3):313-325.
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  • Editorial Introduction: For a Transdisciplinary Practice of Thought.Chryssa Sdrolia, Masayoshi Kosugi & Guillaume Collett - 2013 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (2):157-168.
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  • The Sensation of the Look: The Gazes in Laurence Anyways.Corey Kai Nelson Schultz - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (1):1-20.
    This article analyses the gazes, looks, stares and glares in Laurence Anyways, and examines their affective, interpretive, and symbolic qualities, and their potential to create viewer empathy through affect. The cinematic gaze can produce sensations of shame and fear, by offering a sequence of varied “encounters” to which viewers can react, before we have been given a character onto which we can deflect them, thus bypassing the representational, narrative and even the sympathetic power of the medium to create “raw”, apparently (...)
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  • The Creation of the Concept through the Interaction of Philosophy with Science and Art.Mathias Schönher - 2013 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (1):26-52.
    In What Is Philosophy? we find philosophy devised as that power of thinking and creating which, in a division of labour with science and art, creates the concept. This division of labour points to the free interplay of Reason, Understanding and Imagination in Kant's Critique of Judgement and enables us to affirm, without obliterating the differences in kind, the non-hierarchical relationship between the three forms of thought that is asserted by Deleuze and Guattari. However, as powers of thinking and creating, (...)
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  • James Stirling's Architecture and the Post-War Crisis of Movement.Todd Jerome Satter - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (1):55-71.
    Deleuze's cinema project identifies a crisis of movement, action and thought, established initially in the war-devastated spaces of neo-realist cinema. Indirectly these spaces subordinate architecture as the locus of crisis, which only new, temporal artistic practices can avert. However, an architectural model of the smooth and striated, revealing a sophisticated interplay of the two concepts, can reinstall design practice and the intentional built environment as part of a productive and affirmative image of thought. The designs of James Stirling, whose career (...)
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  • Passions and Actions: Deleuze's Cinematographic Cogito.Richard Rushton - 2008 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (2):121-139.
    When writing about cinema does Deleuze have a conception of cinema spectatorship? In New Philosophy for New Media, Mark Hansen argues that Deleuze does have a conception of cinema spectatorship but that the subjectivity central to that spectatorship is weak and impoverished. This article argues against Hansen's reductive interpretation of Deleuze. In doing so, it relies on the three syntheses of time developed in Difference and Repetition alongside an elaboration of Deleuze's notion of a ‘cinematographic Cogito’. In this way, the (...)
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  • Between Luxury and Need: The Idea of Distance in Philosophical Anthropology.Alison Ross - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 25 (3):378-392.
    This paper offers a critical analysis of the use of the idea of distance in philosophical anthropology. Distance is generally presented in works of philosophical anthropology as the ideal coping strategy, which rests in turn on the thesis of the instinct deficiency of the human species. Some of the features of species life, such as its sophisticated use of symbolic forms, come to be seen as necessary parts of this general coping strategy, rather than a merely expressive outlet, incidental to (...)
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  • Signatures of the Invisible: On Schizoanalysis and Visual Culture.Phillip Roberts - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (2):151-162.
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  • Cinema as mnemotechnics: Bernard stiegler and the “industrialization of memory”.Ben Roberts - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (1):55 – 63.
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  • Control and Cinema: Intolerable Poverty and the Films of Béla Tarr.Phillip Roberts - 2017 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 11 (1):68-94.
    In Cinema 2 Deleuze conceptualises the time-image as a cinema of infinite variation, opening the stable forms of the movement-image to an unformed and virtual outside. Five years later he would develop a similar analysis in the short ‘Postscript on the Societies of Control’, arguing that a new system of organisation was expanding the disciplinary formations that had reached their peak in the first part of the twentieth century. In both works Deleuze explores a world in the process of systemic (...)
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  • Samuel Fuller's Schizo-violent Cinema and the Affective Politics of War.Elena Del Rio - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (3):438-463.
    This essay begins by considering Samuel Fuller's 1963 film Shock Corridor as a model of schizo-violence – a disorganised violence that eludes the Oedipal, moralising binary of action and reaction, and instead opens up the violent action to multiple becomings outside Oedipal and nationalistic framings. Through the de-Oedipalisation of the violent events punctuating American history, Shock Corridor performs a schizoanalytic model of desire capable of giving free rein to the force of traumatic affections. The latter part of the discussion situates (...)
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  • Timothy Murray (2008) Digital Baroque: New Media Art and Cinematic Folds.John A. Riley - 2010 - Film-Philosophy 14 (1):422-429.
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  • Sarah Cooper (2019). Film and the imagined image. [REVIEW]Giulia Rho - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (1):146-149.
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  • Democratic freedom as an aesthetic achievement: Peirce, Schiller and Cavell on aesthetic experience, play and democratic freedom.Michael Räber - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (3):332-355.
    In this essay, I reconsider the constitution of democratic freedom in aesthetic terms. My interest is in articulating a conception of aesthetic freedom that can be mapped onto a conception of democratic freedom. For this purpose, I bring together Charles Sanders Peirce’s ontology, which comprises fragments of an aesthetic theory, Friedrich Schiller’s concept of aesthetic play and Stanley Cavell’s democratic perfectionism. By providing a philosophical framework for constructing an aesthetics and politics that supports the recent aesthetic turn in political theory, (...)
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  • Lost and Beautiful or the (Environmental) Ethics of the Lyric Essay Film.Laura Rascaroli & Paolo Saporito - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (3):464-487.
    This article contributes to a theory of the lyric essay film by bringing studies of the essay film and lyricism to bear on Pietro Marcello’s Lost and Beautiful (2015). We argue that the lyric essay film delivers its argument by leveraging the tension between words and images, narrative and counter-narrative components, and the (non)human subjectivities (i.e. the director’s, characters’ and camera’s) its text embodies and enacts. These tensions generate interstitial sites from which the ethics and politics of the lyric essay (...)
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  • The Political Significance of the Face: Deleuze's Critique of Levinas.Gavin Rae - 2016 - Critical Horizons 17 (3-4):279-303.
    While Levinas famously claims that ethics precedes ontology and emanates from the concrete experience of the other's face, it is often forgotten that Deleuze also discusses the face in numerous writings. The purpose of this paper is to briefly outline Levinas's arguments regarding the constitution of the face to chart its ethical importance, before engaging with Deleuze's critique of Levinas's position. I show that, by distinguishing between two systems of signification – the head-body system and the face system – Deleuze (...)
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  • Layered Encounters: Mainstream Cinema and the Disaggregate Digital Composite.Lisa Purse - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (2):148-167.
    The digital surface in cinema has, throughout its relatively brief history, been subject to a familiar “iconophobic” tendency, documented by Rosalind Galt, to denigrate surface decoration as “empty spectacle”. In early scholarship on computer generated images in cinema, the digital surface's alleged seamlessness and “new depthlessness” frequently became an overdetermined nexus of loss: of material presence, of an indexical relation to the world and lived experience, and of the continuation of older traditions of narrative cinema. Today, digital visual effects sequences (...)
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  • Cinematic thinking: Narratives and bioethics unbound.Connie C. Price - 2007 - American Journal of Bioethics 7 (8):21 – 23.
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  • Synaptic Signals: Time Travelling Through the Brain in the Neuro-Image.Patricia Pisters - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (2):261-274.
    This essay presents some thoughts on schizoanalysis and visual culture around the proposition that cinema survives in the digital age as a type of image that, after the movement-image and the time-image, could be called the neuro-image. By considering clinical schizophrenia as ‘degree zero’ of schizoanalysis in a more critical sense, a reading of The Butterfly Effect unfolds the temporal dimensions of schizoanalysis as typical for a definition of ‘the neuro-image’. The argument is that the neuro-image speaks from the (always (...)
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  • The Filmmaker as Metallurgist: Political Cinema and World Memory.Patricia Pisters - 2016 - Film-Philosophy 20 (1):149-167.
    Compared to earlier waves of political cinema, such as the Russian revolution films of the 1920s and the militant Third Cinema movement in the 1960s, in today's globalized and digital media world filmmakers have adopted different strategies to express a commitment to politics. Rather than directly calling for a revolution, ‘post-cinema’ filmmakers with a political mission point to the radical contingencies of history; they return to the archives and dig up never seen or forgotten materials. They reassemble stories, thoughts, and (...)
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  • Deleuze and Guattari’s language for new empirical inquiry.Elizabeth Adams St Pierre - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (11):1080-1089.
    This paper reviews Deleuze’s theory of language in Logic of Sense, and Deleuze and Guattari’s theory of language in A Thousand Plateaus. In the ontology informed by the Stoics described in those books, human being and language do not exist separately but in a mixture of words and things. The author argues that this flattened ontology of surfaces is incommensurable with the ontology of depth used in conventional humanist qualitative methodology and recommends beginning new empirical inquiry with a concept instead (...)
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  • Jean‐Luc Godard's Film Socialisme and the Pedagogy of the Image.Michael A. Peters - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (7):681-685.
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  • Film as Artificial Intelligence: Jean Epstein, Film-Thinking and the Speculative-Materialist Turn in Contemporary Philosophy.Christine Reeh Peters - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (2):151-172.
    This article considers film as a form of artificial intelligence (AI). This non-anthropocentric hypothesis was first formulated in 1946 by filmmaker and theorist Jean Epstein and regards film as the thinking performance of a technical apparatus, the cinematograph, which is a manifestation of machine thinking based on the holistic entanglement of thought and world, film and philosophy. The article pursues an enquiry into ‘thinking’: one of the most prominent and oldest topics considered in philosophy, and also essential to art and (...)
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  • Change, Horizon, and Event in Ozu's Late Spring.Tyler Parks - 2016 - Film-Philosophy 20 (2-3):283-302.
    Over the decades, the films of Yasujirō Ozu have inspired a number of contradictory responses from film critics and theorists. Initially, formal aspects of his work, which Western commentators found difficult to comprehend in relation to the thematic dimensions of the films, were often said to reflect aesthetic and philosophical principles associated with Zen Buddhism. Like the recurrence of plots that explore the transformations of the Japanese family, many formal attributes of Ozu's films were assumed to express various ideas related (...)
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  • The Eye is in Things: On Deleuze and Speculative Realism.Pablo Pachilla - 2022 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 14 (1):44-56.
    Speculative realists have directed a radical critique towards what they call “correlationism,” the stance according to which we only have access to the correlation between thinking and being, and never to either term considered apart from the other. Both Quentin Meillassoux and Ray Brassier have used Gilles Deleuze’s ontology as a paradigmatic example of correlationism. Instead of defending Deleuze from this accusation, I argue that we need to accept it, but that the correlation is drastically transformed when we take into (...)
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  • Non-Cinema, or The Location of Politics in Film.Lúcia Nagib - 2016 - Film-Philosophy 20 (1):131-148.
    Philosophy has repeatedly denied cinema in order to grant it artistic status. Adorno, for example, defined an ‘uncinematic’ element in the negation of movement in modern cinema, ‘which constitutes its artistic character’. Similarly, Lyotard defended an ‘acinema’, which rather than selecting and excluding movements through editing, accepts what is ‘fortuitous, dirty, confused, unclear, poorly framed, overexposed’. In his Handbook of Inaesthetics, Badiou embraces a similar idea, by describing cinema as an ‘impure circulation’ that incorporates the other arts. Resonating with Bazin (...)
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  • Creativity, singularity and techné : The making and unmaking of visual objects in modernity.Warwick Mules - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (1):75-87.
    In an essay published in 1918, Walter Benjamin sets forth a task that will concern him for the rest of his life: The task of a future epistemology is to find for knowledge the sphere of total neutr...
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  • Creativity, Singularity and Techné: the Making and Unmaking of Modern Visual Objec.Warwick Mules - 2006 - Angelaki 11 (1):75 – 87.
    In an essay published in 1918, Walter Benjamin sets forth a task that will concern him for the rest of his life: The task of a future epistemology is to find for knowledge the sphere of total neutrality in regards to concepts of both subject and object; in other words, it is to discover the autonomous, innate sphere of knowledge in which this concept in no way continues to designate the relation between two metaphysical entities. (‘‘The Coming Philosophy’’ 104) Benjamin (...)
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