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Desire is a term often used in conjunction with the subject. This
desire is directed towards the real, which is defined as the
generic core of the linguistic order. As a result of the focus on
affect, the three terms-desire, the subject, the real-have been
fundamentally shaken up and called into question. Affect, in
various forms, is now a matter of concern across a wide range of
disciplines including neuroscience, psychology, the humanities, and
social sciences. All of these fields have a declared interest in
affect, in emotions and sensations, in pathos, passions, and the
senses. Desire After Affect argues that this affective euphoria
cannot be explained solely in terms of a repression of language,
logos, and reason. It argues that the affective turn is symptomatic
of a fundamental shift in modes of thinking about the human
condition. It explores what this means for the human and the
posthuman, animal and machine, and calls for a new theory of
subjectivation, a philosophy of media affect.
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Desire After Affect (Hardcover)
Marie-Luise Angerer; Translated by Nicholas Grindell; Foreword by Patricia T Clough
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R3,062
Discovery Miles 30 620
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Desire is a term often used in conjunction with the subject. This
desire is directed towards the real, which is defined as the
generic core of the linguistic order. As a result of the focus on
affect, the three terms-desire, the subject, the real-have been
fundamentally shaken up and called into question. Affect, in
various forms, is now a matter of concern across a wide range of
disciplines including neuroscience, psychology, the humanities, and
social sciences. All of these fields have a declared interest in
affect, in emotions and sensations, in pathos, passions, and the
senses. Desire After Affect argues that this affective euphoria
cannot be explained solely in terms of a repression of language,
logos, and reason. It argues that the affective turn is symptomatic
of a fundamental shift in modes of thinking about the human
condition. It explores what this means for the human and the
posthuman, animal and machine, and calls for a new theory of
subjectivation, a philosophy of media affect.
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Alexandra Bircken - A-Z (Paperback)
Monika Bayer-Wermuth; Text written by Marie-Luise Angerer, Kirsty Bell; Designed by Hit
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R1,079
Discovery Miles 10 790
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The title seems to announce a comprehensive encyclopedia: from A to
Z, each and every object or material has the potential to become an
element in one of Alexandra Bircken's charged objects and
installations. Whether it's packaging materials, machine parts, or
bones, everything finds a use-the organic as well as the inorganic,
raw materials and industrially produced goods. The constant
reference point in her artistic explorations is the human body and
its contradictory relationship to the environment, as defenselessly
at its mercy as it is dependent on it. This catalogue is the first
to provide a comprehensive overview of Bircken's sculptural
practice from all creative periods, which here enter into a
dialogue that explores the artist's multi-layered statements on
surface, body, movement, shell, and skin.
Affect, or the process by which emotions come to be embodied, is a
burgeoning area of interest in both the humanities and the
sciences. For "Timing of Affect," Marie-Luise Angerer, Bernd Bosel,
and Michaela Ott have assembled leading scholars to explore the
temporal aspects of affect through the perspectives of philosophy,
music, film, media, and art, as well as technology and neurology.
The contributions address possibilities for affect as a capacity of
the body; as an anthropological inscription and a primary,
ontological conjunctive and disjunctive processes; as an
interruption of chains of stimulus and response; and as an arena
within cultural history for political, media, and
psychopharmacological interventions. Showing how these and other
temporal aspects of affect are articulated both throughout history
and in contemporary society, the editors then explore the
implications for the current knowledge structures surrounding
affect today.
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