•  4
    Serge Daney
    In Felicity Colman (ed.), Film, Theory and Philosophy: The Key Thinkers, Acumen Publishing. pp. 122-133. 2009.
  •  10
    Book reviews (review)
    with Michael Beaney, Paul Lennon, Mark Dooley, Tom Rockmore, Mark Haugaard, Susan Mendus, David Evans, Joel Katzav, Victor E. Taylor, Cynthia Macdonald, Attracta Ingram, and Michael Slote
    Humana Mente 4 (2): 328-359. 1996.
  •  3
    Paper presented at Philippe Garrel, le temps incorporé/Embodied Time Université Paris 8 Nanterre 29 & 30 novembre 2018 This paper proposes a loose typology of space and place in Garrel’s cinema. Its point of departure is the 1969 round table organised by Jacques Rivette which was a supplement to a series of film screenings chosen to illustrate the theme of space in cinema. Among the films chosen was Garrel’s Le lit de la vierge, which, for Rivette, is of interest in the way it exemplifies the ci…Read more
  •  7
    Text of a response to a paper by Linda Lai - ‘Presencing the past, a montage experience: walking through a series of temporal nodes’ - at Urban Encounters 2017: Cartographies, Clore Auditorium, Tate Britain, November 11 2017.
  •  4
    Introduction
    with Natalia Rulyova
    In , . 2015.
    The full text of the introduction can be read on the publisher's website
  •  5
    If Beckett’s study of Proust has belatedly received the criticisms its author no doubt anticipated, another influential study published a little over thirty years later has, like its predecessor, elicited, among others, the critical response that the author of the Recherche finds himself recruited to the self-serving project of the critic. Gilles Deleuze’s Proust is cast not as the pessimistic Schopenhauerian which Beckett makes of him, but rather, as a force of affirmation in the quasi-Nietzsch…Read more
  •  7
    This chapter explores the rather striking manner in which at key moments in the history of philosophy, in the discipline’s attempts at self-definition, the genre or literary form of poetry plays a key role. Philosophy, at these moments, has been defined, inter alia, as the enemy of poetry, the guiding light for the philosopher who can only try and inevitably fail to emulate its brilliance, or as the anomalous guest at the philosophical table with whom the host discipline has relations which resu…Read more
  •  5
    Which modernism or modernisms circulate in Deleuze’s two-volume work on cinema? Can one meaningfully claim that both or either The Movement-Image and The Time-Image maintain connections with literary modernism? What relationship if any may be forged between theoretical debates in the areas of literary and film studies as these have been influenced by engagement with Deleuze’s work on cinema? The first obstacle to any successful negotiation of these questions lies in the absence in the books of a…Read more
  •  9
    This essay argues that the representation of pain in Beckett’s writing exposes the paradox in his work concerning the relationship of the individual suffering subject and the community. Making reference to studies of pain and literature generally and to salient studies of Beckett, the essay shows how the narration of pain in Beckett’s prose works in particular is closely linked to its more general interrogation of subject-object relations. As the preeminent agent, source as well as repository of…Read more
  •  9
    Book Reviews (review)
    with George Huxley, John J. Ansbro, Maeve Cooke, Piers Rawling, John Preston, John Bussanich, Flash Q. Fiasco, José Luis Bermúdez, Lucie A. Antoniol, João Branquinho, Jérôme Dokic, Peter König, Iseult Honohan, and Paul S. Miklowitz
    Humana Mente 3 (2): 346-382. 1995.
  •  16
    While positioning and contextualising the short story 'Green Tea' by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu (1814-73) in relation to existing Le Fanu scholarship, this article seeks to explore further the textual reflexivity for which it is renowned. Drawing on Foucault’s notion of regimes in the audio and the visual, in particular, through an attention to the interrelationship of the scopic, auditory and textual regimes of ‘Green Tea’, and to the manner in which writing is explicitly figured as both the sourc…Read more
  • . 2005.
  •  1
    Gemma Corradi Fiumara, The Other Side of Language
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 5 494-494. 1997.
  •  41
    This chapter takes as its point of departure the frequent injunction in Beckett’s late prose works to build or construct an environment for a character to inhabit. It is proposed that this instruction is central to the textual operations of the late prose. Making use of the work of Philippe Hamon on text and architecture, and through a close reading of Beckett’s short prose piece (originally written as a libretto for Morton Feldman), it is argued that, despite its sparse nature, ‘Neither’ can, i…Read more
  •  137
    And the ship sails on (review)
    Radical Philosophy 184 (184): 46-49. 2014.
    Extract: [...] Badiou himself seems however, by turns, relatively modest and occasionally self-congratulatory as regards any claim to make a major intervention in the field. His entertaining and informative account of his largely solitary cinéphilia of the 1950s and 1960s, as a ‘young provincial’ frequenting the Cinémathèque (a few doors away at that time from the École Normale Supérieure on the rue d’Ulm), through to his work as a ‘heathen’ iniltrating the Catholic journal Vin nouveau, and on t…Read more
  •  22
    This chapter explores the rather striking manner in which at key moments in the history of philosophy, in the discipline’s attempts at self-definition, the genre or literary form of poetry plays a key role. Philosophy, at these moments, has been defined, inter alia, as the enemy of poetry, the guiding light for the philosopher who can only try and inevitably fail to emulate its brilliance, or as the anomalous guest at the philosophical table with whom the host discipline has relations which resu…Read more
  •  12
    This is a pre-publication author's version of a text published in 'Understanding Bergson, understanding modernism'
  •  18
    Books briefly noted
    with Mark Haugaard and Maurice Larkin
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 5 (3). 1997.
    The Panopticon Writings By Jeremy Bentham (Edited by Miran Bo ovic, Verso, 1995. ISBN 1-85984-958-X (hbk) 34.95. The Other Side of Language: A Philosophy of Listening By Gemma Corradi Fiumara, Routledge, 1995, Pp. 231. ISBN 0-415-04927-X. 12.99. Foreign Bodies By Alphonso Lingis, Routledge, 1994, Pp. vii + 236. ISBN 0-415-90990-2. 45.00 (hbk), 15.99 (pbk).
  •  14
    This paper explores the framing qualities of architecture in conjunction with the framing operations of cinema. In doing so it refers to philosophical inquiry into architecture and to architectural philosophy as well as to attempts to think film and the architectural together. In what sense or senses can architecture be considered 'primary' in relation to cinema? This first question will be explored by considering the inscription or encompassment of the architectural as a foundational gesture in…Read more
  •  27
    A review of Peg Rawes "Space, Geometry and Aesthetics: Through Kant and towards Deleuze".
  •  252
    What can philosophy bring to the reading of Beckett? Combining intertextual analysis with a ‘schizoanalytic genealogy’ derived from the authors of L’Anti-Œdipe, Garin Dowd’sMachines: Samuel Beckett and Philosophy after Deleuze and Guattari offers an innovative response to this much debated question. The author focuses on zones of encounter and thresholds of engagement between Beckett’s writing and a range of philosophers and philosophical concepts. Beckett’s writing impacts in a variety of ways …Read more
  • Michael Hardt, Gilles Deleuze: an Apprenticeship in Philosophy
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 3 (2): 359-361. 1995.
  • Gilles Deleuze, Critique et Clinique
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 3 (2): 358-358. 1995.
  • Without Criteria: Kant, Whitehead, Deleuze and Aesthetics (review)
    Radical Philosophy 158. 2009.
  •  400
    This essay argues that the representation of pain in Beckett’s writing exposes the paradox in his work concerning the relationship of the individual suffering subject and the community. Making reference to studies of pain and literature generally and to salient studies of Beckett, the essay shows how the narration of pain in Beckett’s prose works in particular is closely linked to its more general interrogation of subject-object relations. As the preeminent agent, source as well as repository of…Read more