•  70
    Stanley Cavell's writing on film has been an important inspiration for the recent 'philosophical turn' in film theory. But few studies have explored the significance of Cavell's style of writing, how it communicates his distinctive manner of thinking with film. This article explores Cavell's style as a way of doing philosophy, and suggests that his attempt to capture the aesthetic experience of film in evocative prose makes an important contribution to developing new ways of thinking in film-phi…Read more
  •  9
    A book review of 'Diagrams of Sensation: Deleuze and Aesthetics Pli,' by Darren Ambrose and Wahida Khandker, The Warwick Journal of Philosophy Volume 16 ISBN 1897646127.
  •  18
    Questioning style
    In Alex Clayton & Andrew Klevan (eds.), The Language and Style of Film Criticism, Routledge. 2011.
  • Heidegger and the 'End of Art'
    Literature & Aesthetics 14 (1): 89-109. 2004.
  •  7
    The politics of the multiple
    Critical Horizons 8 (1): 96-115. 2007.
    A review of "Being and Event", by A. Badiou, O. Feltham, New York: Continuum, 2005, ISBN 0826458319.
  •  87
    Few cinephiles would deny the importance of mood in film, yet the aesthetics of mood are curiously overlooked today. On the one hand, mood is an essential dimension of cinema: we define certain genres, for example, by suggesting the moods they evoke. On the other hand, words frequently fail us when we try to articulate such moods in a more abstract or analytical vein. I offer in this essay some critical reflections on the significance of mood, suggesting that mood works in narrative film by the …Read more
  •  72
    Anatomy of melancholia
    Angelaki 19 (4): 111-126. 2014.
    :This article analyses some of the aesthetic and philosophical strands of Lars von Trier's Melancholia, focusing in particular on the film's remarkable Prelude, arguing that it performs a complex ethical critique of rationalist optimism in the guise of a neo-italictic allegory of world-destruction. At the same time, I suggest that Melancholia seeks to “work through” the loss of worlds – cinematic but also cultural and natural – that characterises our historical mood, one that might be described …Read more
  •  6
    Preamble
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 86 (4). 2008.
  •  13
    Null
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 86 (4): 696-697. 2008.
  •  86
    This paper develops a genealogical critique of the concepts of biopower and biopolitics in the work of Foucault and Agamben. It shows how Heidegger's reflections on Machenschaft or machination prefigure the concepts of biopower and biopolitics. It develops a critique of Foucault's account of biopolitics as a system of managing the biological life of populations culminating in neo-liberalism, and a critique of Agamben's presentation of biopolitics as the metaphysical foundation of Western politic…Read more
  •  52
    Cinempathy: Phenomenology, Cognitivism, and Moving Images
    Contemporary Aesthetics. forthcoming.
    Some of the most innovative philosophical engagement with cinema and ethics in recent years has come from phenomenological and cognitivist perspectives. This trend reflects a welcome re-engagement with cinema as a medium with the potential for ethical transformation, that is, with the idea of cinema as a medium of ethical experience. This paper explores the phenomenological turn in film theory, emphasizing the ethical implications of phenomenological approaches to affect and empathy, emotion, an…Read more
  • Rebecca Comay & John McCumber Eds's Endings. A Question Of Memory In Hegel And Heidegger (review)
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 47 96-100. 2003.
  •  4
    Simon Critchley's Infinitely Demanding makes a timely contribution to contemporary debates in ethics and political philosophy. For all its originality, however, one can raise critical questions concerning Critchley's account of the forms of resistance possible within liberal democratic polities. In this article I question the adequacy of Critchley's ethically based neo-anarchism as a response to neo-liberalism, critically analysing the role of ideology in his account of the motivational deficit …Read more
  •  13
    Hugo Miinsterberg
    In Felicity Colman (ed.), Film, Theory and Philosophy: The Key Thinkers, Acumen Publishing. pp. 20-30. 2009.
    Film, Theory and Philosophy brings together leading scholars to provide a detailed overview of the key thinkers who have shaped the field of film philosophy. The thinkers include continental philosophers, post-continental philosophers, analytic philosophers, film-makers, film reviewers, sociologists, and cultural theorists. The essays reveal how philosophy can be applied to film analysis and how film can be used to illustrate philosophical problems. But more importantly, the essays explore how f…Read more
  •  31
    This essay presents a critical interpretation of Derrida’s deconstructive reading of Walter Benjamin’s text, "Critique of Violence." It examines the relationship between deconstruction and justice, and the parallel Derrida draws between deconstructive reading and Benjamin’s account of pure violence. I argue that Derrida blurs Benjamin’s distinction between the political general strike and the proletarian general strike. As a consequence, Derrida criticises Benjamin’s metaphysical complicity with…Read more
  •  89
    he enigmatic films of David Lynch have been interpreted from a variety of perspectives. Among these we can find Lynch the postmodernist ironist, Lynch the transgressive neoconservative, and Lynch the visionary explorer of the unconscious. Martha P. Nochimson's recent study, for example, presents an eloquent case for regarding Lynch as a Jungian 'surfer of the waves of the collective unconscious', whose films combine the intuitive embracing of subconscious Life Energy with a celebration of the cr…Read more
  •  8
    First page preview
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 86 (4). 2008.
  •  56
    Critical Theory As Disclosing Critique: A Response to Kompridis
    Constellations 19 (3): 369-381. 2012.
    What Kompridis admirably describes as the transformative power of disclosing critique should be incorporated into a renewed model of critical theory. At the same time, disclosing critique should be regarded as supplementing, rather than supplanting, those normative forms of analysis and reflection that remain rooted in experiences of social suffering, which are precisely what continue to give critical theory its normative ground and theoretical impetus. In this way, we could agree with Kompridis…Read more
  •  47
    The future of critical theory? Kompridis on world-disclosing critique
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 37 (9): 1053-1061. 2011.
    Nikolas Kompridis has recently argued that the future of critical theory depends upon a critical appropriation of Heidegger’s concept of ‘world disclosure’, and hence on a transformation of critical theory into a form of ‘world-disclosing critique’ oriented towards the future. This article engages in a critical dialogue with Kompridis' account of world-disclosing critique, arguing that critical theory should embrace it as an innovative way of retrieving the forgotten tradition of aesthetic criti…Read more