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  1. Deleuze's Three Syntheses Go to Hollywood: The Tripartite Cinema of Time Travel, Many Worlds and Altered States.David Deamer - 2019 - Film-Philosophy 23 (3):324-350.
    What is called “time travel” cinema is but one aspect in a tripartite series of interweaving modes of disjunctive narration which is also – simultaneously – a cinema of “many worlds” and “altered states”. Exploiting Gilles Deleuze's three syntheses of time, space, and consciousness from Difference and Repetition (1968) allows a conceptual development of these cinematic series through three popular Hollywood film cycles beginning with Planet of the Apes (Franklin J. Schaffner, 1968), The Terminator (James Cameron, 1984), and Back to (...)
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  • A Deleuzian Cineosis: Cinematic Semiosis and Syntheses of Time.David Deamer - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (3):358-382.
    In Cinema 1 Deleuze creates the taxonomy of the movement-image by extending Henri Bergson's account of the sensory-motor process in Matter and Memory through the semiotic system of Charles Sanders Peirce. Through this nexus of Bergson and Peirce, Deleuze can account for each image and sign, their impetus and their relationship to one another. In contrast, the taxonomy of the time-image, the focus of Cinema 2, is given no such genesis. Rather, the images and signs appear in situ, as if (...)
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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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  • Deleuze, leitor de Espinosa: automatismo espiritual e fascismo no cinema.Susana Viegas - 2014 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 55 (129):363-378.
    Neste texto, procuro encontrar as origens de um dos mais importantes conceitos de Gilles Deleuze, o conceito de Imagem-tempo. Este conceito remete-nos para os primeiros textos de Deleuze dedicados à filosofia de Espinosa e ao problema do autómato espiritual e relaciona-se directamente com o problema da passividade/actividade do espectador. Ou seja, o conceito crucial na sua filosofia do cinema, a Imagem-tempo, esconde uma importante reflexão sobre a Imagem cinematográfica como arte de massas, os (im)poderes do pensamento e o modo fascista (...)
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  • Deleuze’s zeroness and Peirce’s pure zero regarding the expansion of semiotics’ categorial frame.Helio Rebello Cardoso Jr - 2024 - Semiotica 2024 (258):1-23.
    Deleuze (1925–1995), in the early 1980s, adopts Peirce’s (1839–1914) semiotics in order to classify the signs that the images of the cinema display. Aiming at insufflating the Peircean principles with the movement that animates the images of cinema, he provides Peirce’s triadic logic with a new category – Zeroness – which stands for the semiotic movement of cinematic images. Deleuze’s new category has impacts on the main domains of Peirce’s philosophy. Accordingly, our inquiry will focus on the irradiation of Zeroness (...)
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  • Francesco Sticchi (2019) Melancholy Emotion in Contemporary Cinema: A Spinozian Analysis of Film Experience.Claudio Celis Bueno - 2021 - Film-Philosophy 25 (1):70-73.
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