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  1. Creativity in the Age of Information: An Essay on Gilles Deleuze’s Transcendental Empiricist Philosophy.Sean Winkler - 2023 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 54 (2):132-145.
    In the “Age of Information”, we are confronted by a strange paradox: on one hand, we have at our disposal resources for creating that far exceed what any previous generation could have imagined, bu...
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  • APOPHATIC ANIMALITY: lautréamont, bachelard, and the bliss of metamorphosis.Eugene Thacker - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (1):83-98.
    This essay examines animality through an analysis of Les Chants de Maldoror, an obscure but influential nineteenth-century text by the Comte de Lautréamont. Drawing upon the work of Gaston Bachelard as well as the apophatic tradition in Christian mysticism, Les Chants de Maldoror can be read as a text that complicates the boundary between animality and spirituality, producing an “apophatic animality” that ultimately impacts the poetics of the text itself.
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  • Myth-Science and the Fictioning of Reality.Simon O’Sullivan - 2016 - Paragrana: Internationale Zeitschrift für Historische Anthropologie 25 (2):80-93.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Paragrana Jahrgang: 25 Heft: 2 Seiten: 80-93.
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  • A Response to: "Deconstructing Deleuze and Guattari's A Thousand Plateaus for Music Education".Jan Jagodzinski - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 50 (3):101-121.
    One would have to be too “simple” to believe that thought is a simple act, clear unto itself, and not putting into play all the powers of the unconscious, or all the powers of nonsense in the unconscious.1As someone who has taken out the time to study Deleuze|Guattari’s oeuvre,2 rather than targeting just one book, A Thousand Plateaus in such a superficial way, reading Estelle Jorgensen and Iris M. Yob’s “deconstruction” of this particular work has been a very painful experience, (...)
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  • In the Shadow of Akimbo Corporatism: Arched Athleticism and the Becoming-Human of ‘a People’.Johnny Golding - 2016 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 10 (2):263-279.
    The importance of Deleuze and Deleuze and Guattari's development of ‘encounter’ is brought into sharp relief as key to the notion of ‘athleticism’. Here, each is developed as indispensable to the other, forming an a-radical/ana-material groundless ground to power, politics, literary sensibility, indeed sense itself. This nuanced encounter produces an acephaletic knowledge, a body-knowledge, without the Ego-I. In an age of massifying systems, drone warfare and horrific migrations, where corporate tentacles bend the rules akimbo, one finds that this turn to (...)
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  • The Problem of the Body in Deleuze and Guattari, Or, What Can a Body Do?Ian Buchanan - 1997 - Body and Society 3 (3):73-91.
    You never reach the Body without Organs, you can't reach it, you are forever attaining it, it is a limit. People ask, So what is this BwO? - But you're already on it, scurrying like vermin, grouping like a blind person, or running like a lunatic: desert traveller and nomad of the steppes. On it we sleep, live our waking lives, fight - fight and are fought - seek our place, experience untold happiness and fabulous defeats; on it we penetrate (...)
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  • Repulsive Image: The Idea of Literature after Blanchot.William Allen - 2011 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 42 (2):139-159.
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  • Agamben as and through Benjamin's storyteller and translator.McKnight Heather - unknown
    Written in the form of a fairy tale dialogue, presented like a novella, here an attempt is being made to reduce the gap between that which is being said and that which is being referred to itself. It aims to breathe life into the hypothesis of Agamben appearing as and through Benjamin’s Storyteller and Translator by presenting it in a state of becoming. The form is a nod to the spirit of the fairy tale in the work of both Agamben (...)
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