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  1. Desired Machines: Cinema and the World in Its Own Image.Jimena Canales - 2011 - Science in Context 24 (3):329-359.
    ArgumentIn 1895 when the Lumière brothers unveiled their cinematographic camera, many scientists were elated. Scientists hoped that the machine would fulfill a desire that had driven research for nearly half a century: that of capturing the world in its own image. But their elation was surprisingly short-lived, and many researchers quickly distanced themselves from the new medium. The cinematographic camera was soon split into two machines, one for recording and one for projecting, enabling it to further escape from the laboratory. (...)
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  • Give Me Slack: Depression, Alertness, and Laziness in Seattle.John Marlovits - 2013 - Anthropology of Consciousness 24 (2):137-157.
    This article is about alertness and depressive enactments in Seattle, Washington. It tracks depression and depressive disorder as something beyond a psychiatric diagnosis—more as a generative cultural analytic and mode of alertness that people use to track affect and a sense of ordinariness-gone-tilt. I argue that depressive enactments constitute a mode of alertness used to track something emergent, unknown, unpredictable, and often disruptive—affective currents that are sensed but not clearly understood. Based on 18 months of ethnographic fieldwork that I conducted (...)
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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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  • Deterritorialisation and Schizoanalysis in David Fincher's Fight Club.David H. Fleming & William Brown - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (2):275-299.
    Taking a schizoanalytic approach to audio-visual images, this article explores some of the radical potentia for deterritorialisation found within David Fincher's Fight Club (1999). The film's potential for deterritorialisation is initially located in an exploration of the film's form and content, which appear designed to interrogate and transcend a series of false binaries between mind and body, inside and outside, male and female. Paying attention to the construction of photorealistic digital spaces and composited images, we examine the actual (and possible) (...)
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  • Genre, gender, giallo: the disturbed dreams of Dario Argento.Colette Jane Balmain - unknown
    This thesis presents an examination of the giallo films of Dario Argento from his directorial debut The Bird with the Crystal Plumage to The Stendhal Syndrome'. In opposition to the dominant psychoanalytical approaches to the horror film generally and Argento's giallo specifically, this thesis argues that the giallo, both textually and meta-textually, actively resists oedipalisation. Taking up from Deleuze's contention in Cinema 1: The Movement Image that the cinematic-image can be consider the equivalent to a philosophical concept, I suggest that (...)
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  • The Image of Thought.Jean-Clet Martin - 2009 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 3 (1):1-25.
    The image of thought that Rembrandt proposes with his Philosopher in Meditation still wears the mask of the old philosophical pedagogy based on ascent and the heights, but it ushers in new percepts and affects corresponding to the philosopher's concept, fold, that Leibniz elevates to the status of the principle of Baroque variation. The fold unleashes a power that carries forms and statements over a variety of disjunctive statements.
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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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  • How can we tell the dancer from the dance?: The subject of dance and the subject of philosophy.Claire Colebrook - 2004 - Topoi 24 (1):5-14.
    One of the most important aspects of Gilles Deleuzes philosophy is his criticism of the traditional concept of praxis. In Aristotelian philosophy praxis is properly oriented towards some end, and in the case of human action the ends of praxis are oriented towards the agents good life. Human goods are, for both Aristotle and contemporary neo-Aristotelians, determined by the potentials of human life such as rationality, communality, and speech. Deleuzes account of action, by contrast, liberates movement from an external end. (...)
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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 unknowable other and ethics of ungraspability: Education through the irrational.Sajad Kabgani - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    The insistence on knowledge accumulation in modern educational discourses has led to the formation of exclusive dichotomies in various forms, most tangibly observable in the division of people into ‘knowledgeable’ and ‘unknowledgeable’. What underlies this dichotomy is a conception of rationality based on which knowledge is seen as an ‘instrument’ which must necessarily result in a usable, profitable product. From a Levinasian perspective, the latter situation inevitably, if not purposefully, leads to the formation of the Other being located at 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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  • 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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  • Compression and Noise.M. Curtis Allen - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 9 (2):101-117.
    This essay elaborates the nature and consequences of compression and noise, understood as interdependent phenomena determining current aesthetic regimes and modes of perception in the “cognitive co...
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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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  • Gestures, Attunements and Atmospheres: On Photography and Urban Space.Nélio Rodrigues Conceição - 2021 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 8 (2):135-153.
    Developed through a series of conceptual analyses (Edmund Husserl, Vilém Flusser, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Walter Benjamin) and case studies (Fernando Lopes’s Belarmino and Jeff Wall’s Mimic), this article delves into the relationship between gesture, attunement and atmosphere and how it unfolds in photographic works dealing with urban space. The first section focuses on the role played by photography in the film Belarmino, which raises questions about both the representation of urban phenomena and issues related to expression and gesture in boxing. (...)
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  • A Grammar in Two Dimensions: The Temporal Mechanics of Arrival and the Semantics/Pragmatics Divide.A. G. Holdier - 2022 - Journal of Science Fiction and Philosophy 5.
    Within the philosophy of language, contextualists typically hold (and semantic minimalists deny) that pragmatic elements of an utterance can affect its semantic content. This paper concretizes this debate by analogizing both positions to different kinds of time-travel stories: contextualism is akin to Ludovician narratives that deny the possibility of temporal editing (or “the changing of past events”) while semantic minimalism is aligned with stories that allow the past to be literally altered. By focusing particularly on Denis Villeneuve’s 2016 film Arrival, (...)
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  • The Inhuman Overhang: On Differential Heterogenesis and Multi-Scalar Modeling.Ekin Erkan - 2020 - la Deleuziana 11:202-235.
    As a philosophical paradigm, differential heterogenesis offers us a novel descriptive vantage with which to inscribe Deleuze’s virtuality within the terrain of “differential becoming,” conjugating “pure saliences” so as to parse economies, microhistories, insurgencies, and epistemological evolutionary processes that can be conceived of independently from their representational form. Unlike Gestalt theory’s oppositional constructions, the advantage of this aperture is that it posits a dynamic context to both media and its analysis, rendering them functionally tractable and set in relation to other (...)
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  • The one or the other French philosophy today. [REVIEW]Peter Hallward - 2003 - Angelaki 8 (2):1-32.
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  • Finding a Basic Interpretive Unit through the Human Visual Perception and Cognition-A Comparison between Filmmakers and Audiences.Lingfei Luan - 2016 - Dissertation,
    The analysis method and paradigm of film have become a controversial topic in the data-driven era. Film, is not only an attractive industry that can achieve filmmakers’ imagination but has become a perfect stimulus to understand human being’s mental activity. The core research in this study is to examine the impact of filmmaking experience and the role of narrative denoters from filmmakers’ construction to audiences’ interpretation. Based on previous studies and integrating cognitive approaches, the thesis re-explores the nature and essence (...)
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  • Deep Truth and the Mythic Veil: Werner Herzog's New Mythology in Land of Silence and Darkness.André Fischer - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (1):39-59.
    This article begins with Werner Herzog's programmatic statements on new images and deep truth and connects it to ideas of Nietzschean aesthetics, mainly the Apollonian image and the Dionysian horror. My main argument is that Herzog contributes to the literary and aesthetic tradition of new mythology within the medium of film by developing a distinct visual language that tries to express non-rational truth claims. In a first step I explore how Nietzschean aesthetics influenced the debates about the mythic image and (...)
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  • Cinematic Terrorism: Deleuze, ISIS and Delirium.Hatem N. Akil - 2016 - Journal for Cultural Research 20 (4):366-379.
    This paper will use the concept of time-image discussed by Gille Deleuze in Cinema 1 and Cinema 2 as a heuristic tool for thinking about the Internet films of the Islamic State. By consideri...
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  • The Mathematical Model of Smooth and Striated Spaces and the Connectivity Problem.Martin Calamari - 2017 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 11 (3):328-355.
    The mathematical model of smooth and striated spaces in Deleuze and Guattari's A Thousand Plateaus essentially rests on Riemann's manifold theory and Lautman's account of Riemannian spaces. In this paper I provide a detailed analysis of Lautman's account, arguing, however, that to discern its intricacies, and particularly what I shall call the connectivity problem, it is crucial to consider the fundamental work of Élie Cartan. This allows to address three key problems of Deleuze and Guattari's model: the heterogeneity and homogeneity (...)
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  • The matter of silence in early childhood bilingual education.Anna Martín-Bylund - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (4):349-358.
    The relationship between silence as non-speech and bilingualism in early childhood education is intricate. This article maps this relationship with the help of diverse theoretical entrances to a video-recorded everyday episode from a bilingual preschool in Sweden. Though this, three alternative readings of silence are produced. Thinking with Deleuzian philosophy, the aim is to consider how the different readings of silence require different understandings of both time and language and allow different bilingual child subjectivities. The different readings present silence as (...)
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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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  • 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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  • 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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  • Deleuze and the pragmatist priority of subject naturalism.Simon B. Duffy - 2014 - In Simone Bignall, Sean Bowden & Paul Patton (eds.), Deleuze and Pragmatism. New York: Routledge. pp. 199-215.
    The aim of this chapter is to test the degree to which Deleuze’s philosophy can be reconciled with the subject naturalist approach to pragmatism put forward by Macarthur and Price.
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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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  • Kierkegaard’s Quest: How Not to Stop Seducing.Finn Janning - 2015 - Philosophy of Management 14 (2):95-109.
    Change has traditionally been perceived as something to be avoided in favor of stability. This can be witnessed in both individual and organizational approaches to change. In this paper, change as a process of becoming is analyzed. The author relates change to seduction to introduce new perspectives to the concept. The principal idea is that the process of change is a seductive experience. This assumption highlights the positive aspects of becoming, growing, and changing. In doing so, reference is made to (...)
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  • Classroom Video Data and the Time-Image: An-Archiving the Student Body.Elizabeth de Freitas - 2015 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 9 (3):318-336.
    Video data has now become the most common form of data for educational researchers studying classroom interaction and school culture. Software protocols for analysing vast archives of video data are deployed regularly, allowing researchers to annotate, code and sort images. These protocols are often applied by researchers without reflection or reference to the extensive philosophical work in film and media studies. Without exception, this research treats the video image as movement-image or picture, a recording of ‘raw data’, indexical of a (...)
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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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  • Time: space.Mike Crang - 2005 - In Paul Cloke & Ron Johnston (eds.), Spaces of geographical thought: deconstructing human geography's binaries. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications. pp. 199--220.
    Spaces of Geographical Thought examines key ideas like space and place - which inform the geographic imagination. The text: discusses the core conceptual vocabulary of human geography: agency: structure; state: society; culture: economy; space: place; black: white; man: woman; nature: culture; local: global; and time: space; explains the significance of these binaries in the constitution of geographic thought; and shows how many of these binaries have been interrogated and re-imagined in more recent geographical thinking. A consideration of these binaries will (...)
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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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  • 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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  • Deleuze, Bergson and Woolf's Monday or Tuesday.John Hughes - 2013 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (4):496-514.
    Deleuze's references to Woolf's work, and his work on Bergson, allow for a more far-reaching as well as more nuanced and diverse account of her correspondences with Bergson than have been noted. Her early collection of stories, Monday or Tuesday, reveals a powerful, many-sided metaphysical and aesthetic inspiration that bears out in detailed, various and fundamental ways what can be called the Deleuzian or Bergsonian aspects of Woolf's creativity and style at this crucial phase of her development as a writer.
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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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  • The Closure of the 'Gold Window': From 'Camera-Eye' to 'Brain-Screen'.Morgan M. Adamson - 2013 - Film-Philosophy 17 (1):245-264.
    This essay explores the correspondence between cinema and money through an investigation of what I call the 'financialization of the image.' Drawing from the tradition of psychoanalytic film criticism and the cinematic ontology of Gilles Deleuze, it argues that the 'camera-eye' and the 'brain-screen' are distinct modes of organizing cinematic perception in capital. Furthermore, it argues that Gilles Deleuze's understanding of the brain-screen is the most adequate mode of thinking of the organization of subjective vision within control societies and the (...)
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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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  • 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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  • 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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