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97‘A Grandiose Time of Coexistence’: Stratigraphy of the AnthropoceneDeleuze and Guatarri Studies 10 (4): 440-454. 2016.Using Deleuze and Guattari's concept of stratigraphy, it is possible to open the question of the limits and range of the Anthropocene. Geological stratification has enabled a view of time and the earth that has opened new horizons, but this mode of stratification is one among others. Other stratifications are possible, not only those that would be compossible with the story of the Anthropocene, but also incompossible stratifications, at odds with the history of man.
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79Sex and the (Anthropocene) CityTheory, Culture and Society 34 (2-3): 39-60. 2017.In this essay I explore three concepts: sex, the city, and the Anthropocene. I argue that the condition for the possibility of the city is the assemblage of sexual drives for the sake of relative stability, but that those same drives also exceed the city's self-preservative function. Further, I argue that the very conditions that further the city and that enable philosophical and scientific concepts to be formed (and that allow for the Anthropocene to be discerned as an epoch) rely upon a geolog…Read more
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42Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World (review)philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 5 (2): 309-314. 2015.
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109The becoming-photographic of cinemaPhilosophy of Photography 6 (1): 5-24. 2015.Both Gilles Deleuze and Bernard Stiegler have sought a renewal of life, perception and philosophy by way of the radical temporality of cinema. In doing so they have, in part, contributed to a long-standing moralism in philosophy that defines itself against the still or photographic image. Rather than see photography as a fragment of a flow of time, and therefore as on its way to becoming cinematic, I argue that the photograph that is cut off from the flow of time provides a more provocative and …Read more
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192Matter Without BodiesDerrida Today 4 (1): 1-20. 2011.Materialism is at once the most general of concepts, capable of gesturing to anything that seems either foundational or physicalist, and yet is also one of the most rhetorical of gestures: operating as a way of reducing, criticising or ‘‘exorcising’’ forms of idealism and ideology. Derrida's early, supposedly ‘‘textualist’’ works appear to endorse a materiality of the letter (including syntax, grammar, trace and writing) while the later works focus on matter as split between that which is posite…Read more
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Graphematics, politics and ironyIn Martin McQuillan (ed.), The politics of deconstruction: Jacques Derrida and the other of philosophy, Pluto Press. pp. 192--211. 2007.
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269Derrida, Deleuze and Haptic AestheticsDerrida Today 2 (1): 22-43. 2009.In On Touching Derrida locates Jean-Luc Nancy (and, briefly, Gilles Deleuze) within a tradition of haptic ethics and aesthetics that runs from Aristotle to the present. In his early work on Husserl, Derrida had already claimed that phenomenology's commitment to the genesis of sense and the sensible is at one and the same time a commitment to pure and rigorous philosophy at the same time as it threatens to over-turn the primacy of conceptuality and cognition.Whereas Nancy (and those other figures…Read more
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212The Secret of TheoryDeleuze and Guatarri Studies 4 (3): 287-300. 2010.This article focuses on the concept of the secret in Deleuze and Guattari's philosophy, with specific attention to the related concepts of becoming-woman and literature. It contrasts Deleuze and Guattari's immanent mode of reading with oedipal theories of the text and hermeneutics. Whereas Deleuze and Guattari argue for the positivity of the secret, where there is content that is not disclosed and that therefore creates lines of perception and interpretation, the oedipal mode of reading regards …Read more
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65Incorporeality: The ghostly body of metaphysicsBody and Society 6 (2): 25--44. 2000.For the past two decades, the issue of the body and essentialism has dominated feminist theory. In general, it is assumed that the body has been devalued and repressed by the Western metaphysical tradition. In this article, I make two claims to the contrary. First, as poststructuralist theory has tirelessly demonstrated, Western thought has continually tried to ground thought in some foundational substance, such as the body. Second, the most provocative, fruitful and radical aspects of recent fe…Read more
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70Feminism and Autonomy: The Crisis of the Self-Authoring SubjectBody and Society 3 (2): 21-41. 1997.
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90Deleuze: a guide for the perplexedContinuum. 2006.Cinema, thought and time -- Deleuze's cinema books -- Technology -- Essences -- Space and time -- Bergson, time, and life -- The movement-image -- The history of time and space and the history of cinema -- The movement-image and semiotics -- Styles of sign -- The whole of movement -- Image and life -- Becoming-inhuman, becoming imperceptible -- The deduction of the movement-image -- Art and time -- Destruction of the sensory motor apparatus and the spiritual automaton -- Time and money -- Art an…Read more
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91Ethics, Positivity, and Gender: Foucault, Aristotle, and the Care of the SelfPhilosophy Today 42 (4): 347-360. 1998.
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117Book review: Dorothea Olkowski. Resistance, flight, creation: Feminist enactments of French philosophy. Ithaca: Cornell university press, 2000 (review)Hypatia 20 (1): 217-220. 2005.
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157Modernism without Women: The Refusal of Becoming-Woman (and Post-Feminism)Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (4): 427-455. 2013.Just as becoming-woman is a divided concept, looking back to a seemingly redemptive figure of the feminine beyond rigid being, but also forward to a positive annihilation of fixed genders, so modernism was also a doubled movement. But modernism was a pulverisation of ‘the’ subject for the sake of a plural and multiplying point of view, and like ‘becoming-woman’, should be read as a defiant and affirmative refusal.
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212How can we tell the dancer from the dance?: The subject of dance and the subject of philosophyTopoi 24 (1): 5-14. 2004.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 mo…Read more
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Dynamic potentiality: the body that stands aloneIn Elena Tzelepis, Athena Athanasiou & Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (eds.), Rewriting Difference: Luce Irigaray and ‘the Greeks’, State University of New York Press. 2010.
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41The Trope of Economy and Representational Thinking: Heidegger, Derrida and IrigarayJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 28 (2): 178-191. 1997.
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133Archiviolithic: The Anthropocene and the Hetero-ArchiveDerrida Today 7 (1): 21-43. 2014.This essay explores three deconstructive concepts – archive, anthropocene, and auto-affection – across two registers. The first is the register of what counts as readability in general, beyond reading in its narrow and actualized sense.. The second register applies to Derrida today, and what it means to read the corpus of a philosopher and how that corpus is governed by proper names. I want to suggest that the way we approach proper names in philosophy and theory is part of a broader problem of …Read more
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59Review of Gregg Lambert, Who's Afraid of Deleuze and Guattari? (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (3). 2008.
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33Jacques Derrida: Key Concepts (edited book)Routledge. 2014.Jacques Derrida: Key Concepts presents a broad overview and engagement with the full range of Derrida's work - from the early phenomenological thinking to his preoccupations with key themes, such as technology, psychoanalysis, friendship, Marxism, racism and sexism, to his ethico-political writings and his deconstruction of democracy. Presenting both an examination of the key concepts central to his thinking and a broader study of how that thinking shifted over a lifetime, the book offers the re…Read more
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329From Radical Representations to Corporeal Becomings: The Feminist Philosophy of Lloyd, Grosz, and GatensHypatia 15 (2): 76-93. 2000.Contrasting the work of Genevieve Lloyd, Elizabeth Grosz, and Moira Gatens with the poststrueturalist philosophy of Judith Butler, this paper identifies a distinctive “Australian” feminism. It argues that while Butler remains trapped by the matter/representation binary, the Spinozist turn in Lloyd and Gatens, and Grosz's work on Bergson and Deleuze, are attempts to think corporeality.
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149Deleuze and the Meaning of LifeContinuum. 2010.Introduction: The problem of vitalism : active/passive -- Brain, system, model : the affective turn -- Vitalism and theoria -- Inorganic art -- Inorganic vitalism -- The vital order after theory -- On becoming -- Living systems, extended minds, gaia -- Conclusion.
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65Patricia Pisters (2012) The Neuro-Image: A Deleuzian Film-Philosophy of Digital Screen Culture, Stanford: Stanford University Press (review)Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 8 (1): 147-152. 2014.
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132Feminist Philosophy and the Philosophy of Feminism: Irigaray and the History of Western MetaphysicsHypatia 12 (1): 79-98. 1997.Irigaray demonstrates that metaphysics depends upon the specific negation and exclusion of the female body. Readings of Irigaray's Speculum of the Other Woman tend to highlight the status of this excluded materiality: is there an essential female body which precedes negation or is the feminine only an effect of exclusion? I approach Irigaray's work by way of another question: is it possible to move beyond a feminist critique of metaphysics and towards a feminist philosophy?
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61Ethics and Representationprovides a critique and overview of contemporary post-structuralist theory. Exploring the Kantian and phenomenological background of Derrida, Deleuze, Foucault, and Irigaray, this book raises some key questions and issues in critical theory. These questions are looked at from a number of angles including the notion of point of view and perspective, the critique of anthropologism from Kant to Deleuze, and the relation between representation and modernity. This is an origi…Read more
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Pennsylvania State UniversityRegular Faculty
University Park, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| 20th Century Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |