12 found
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  1.  15
    Black Mirrors.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2021 - Philosophy Today 65 (3):523-547.
    Reflections on mimesis have tended to be restricted to aesthetic fictions in the past century; yet the proliferation of new digital technologies in the present century is currently generating virtual simulations that increasingly blur the line between aesthetic representations and embodied realities. Building on a recent mimetic turn, or re-turn of mimesis in critical theory, this paper focuses on the British science fiction television series, Black Mirror to reflect critically on the hypermimetic impact of new digital technologies on the formation (...)
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  2.  14
    The Human Chameleon: Zelig, Nietzsche and the Banality of Evil.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2021 - Film-Philosophy 25 (3):272-295.
    This article revisits the case of Woody Allen’s mockumentary Zelig via Friedrich Nietzsche’s diagnostic of mimicry in The Gay Science. It argues that the case of the “human chameleon” remains contemporary for both philosophical and political reasons. On the philosophical side, I argue that the case of Zelig challenges an autonomous conception of the subject based on rational self-sufficiency by proposing a relational conception of the subject open to mimetic influences that will have to await the discovery of mirror neurons (...)
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  3.  7
    Viral Mimesis: The Patho(-) Logies of the Coronavirus.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2021 - Paragrana: Internationale Zeitschrift für Historische Anthropologie 30 (2):155-168.
    This chapter argues that the human, all too human vulnerability to mimesis (imitation) is a central and so far underdiagnosed element internal to the Covid-19 pandemic crisis. Supplementing medical accounts of viral contagion, the chapter develops a genealogy of the concept of mimesis – from antiquity to modernity to the present – that is attentive to both its pathological and therapeutic properties. If an awareness of the pathological side of mimetic contagion is constitutive of the origins of philosophy, in Plato’s (...)
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  4.  28
    Bataille and the Birth of the Subject: out of the laughter of the socius.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (2):73-88.
    This article examines how Georges Bataille, one of the celebrated precursors of the postmodern death of a linguistic subject, is also a Nietzschean, pre-Freudian thinker who offers us an account of the birth of an affective subject. If critics still tend to recuperate Bataille within a “metaphysics of the subject,” the present article shows that the central concept of his thought needs to be reconsidered in the light of his debt to Pierre Janet’s “psychology of the socius,” an interpersonal psychology (...)
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  5.  8
    The Phantom of the Ego: Modernism and the Mimetic Unconscious.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2013 - Michigan State University Press.
    _The Phantom of the Ego _is the first comparative study that shows how the modernist account of the unconscious anticipates contemporary discoveries about the importance of mimesis in the formation of subjectivity. Rather than beginning with Sigmund Freud as the father of modernism, Nidesh Lawtoo starts with Friedrich Nietzsche’s antimetaphysical diagnostic of the ego, his realization that mimetic reflexes—from sympathy to hypnosis, to contagion, to crowd behavior—move the soul, and his insistence that psychology informs philosophical reflection. Through a transdisciplinary, comparative (...)
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  6.  15
    Inclining Mimesis: Continuing the Dialogue with Adriana Cavarero.Nidesh Lawtoo & Adriana Cavarero - 2023 - Critical Horizons 24 (2):195-213.
    In this article, Adriana Cavarero and Nidesh Lawtoo resume a dialogue on mimetic inclinations in view of furthering a relational, embodied and affective conception of subjectivity that challenges homo erectus from the immanent perspective of homo mimeticus. If a dominant philosophical tradition tends to restrict mimesis to an illusory representation of reality, Plato was the first to know that mimesis also operates as an affective force, or pathos, that dispossesses the subject. While Plato tended to emphasize the pathological implications of (...)
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  7.  13
    Mimetic Inclinations: An Introduction.Nidesh Lawtoo, Willow Verkerk & Adriana Cavarero - 2023 - Critical Horizons 24 (2):103-114.
    At first glance, it may appear perplexing to join the ancient concept of “mimesis” with the contemporary concept of “inclinations” via the title of “mimetic inclinations” – and for more than one re...
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  8.  10
    Bataille and the Homology of Heterology.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (4-5):41-68.
    ‘Definition of Heterology’ illuminates sacred, heterogeneous experiences Bataille never stopped interrogating, in their throbbing movement of emergence. Furthering orthodox disciplines in the sciences of man, Bataille accounts for the ambivalent feelings of ‘attraction and repulsion’ at the heart of inner experiences that constitute the heart of his thought. In this paper, I further a mimetic line of inquiry in Bataille studies and argue that the laws of attraction and repulsion that animate heterology find their polarized foundations in the laws of (...)
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  9.  17
    Dueling to the End/Ending "The Duel": Girard avec Conrad.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2015 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 22:153-184.
    A philosopher who is warlike also challenges problems to a duel.There!—there! Don’t be so quick in flourishing the sword. It doesn’t pay in the long run.René Girard’s Achever Clausewitz is his latest, most incisive and penetrating account of the contagious dynamic of mimetic violence.1 It is also a bold attempt to finish Carl von Clausewitz’s classic Vom Kriege in a sense that is at least double.2 On the one hand, Girard sets out to finish Clausewitz’s insights into the dynamic of (...)
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  10. The mimetic e-motion: from The matrix to Avatar.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2015 - In Scott Cowdell, Chris Fleming & Joel Hodge (eds.), Mimesis, movies, and media. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  11.  23
    Violence and the Mimetic Unconscious : The Cathartic Hypothesis: Aristotle, Freud, Girard.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2018 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 25 (1):159-191.
    It might be left to the specialist philosophers to act as spokesmen and mediators in this matter, once they have largely succeeded in reshaping the original relationship of mutual aloofness and suspicion which obtains between the disciplines of philosophy, physiology, and medicine into the most amicable and fruitful exchange.What is the relation between violence and the unconscious in a world increasingly dominated by representations that are fictional yet might turn out to have effects that are all too real? Does an (...)
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  12.  11
    Violence and the Mimetic Unconscious : The Contagious Hypothesis: Plato, Affect, Mirror Neurons.Nidesh Lawtoo - 2019 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 26 (1):123-159.
    To Bill Johnsen, mimetic theorist and innovative editor.Have you not observed that imitations, if continued from youth far into life, settle down into habits and second nature in the body, the speech and the thought?Yes, we have observed the powers of mimesis. And if we reload Socrates's untimely observation for our contemporary, hypermimetic times, we cannot help but wonder yet again: What is the relation between violence, imitation, and the unconscious in a world increasingly dominated by virtual representations of violence, (...)
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