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Tilvistarvandinn, óráð og byltingarkennd ást

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Viðskiptadeild Háskólans í Reykjavík og Heimspekistofnun Háskóla Íslands bjóða til málstofu með útgangspunkt í hugmyndum franska heimspekingsins Gilles Deleuze (1925–1995). Málstofan verður haldin í HR, stofu M209, þann 12. september kl. 16-18:30.

Áhrifa hugmynda Deleuze gætir víða innan hug- og félagsvísinda og lista, þar á meðal bókmennta, félagsfræða, femínisma, arkitektúrs, skipulags- og frumkvöðlafræða. Á málstofunni flytja tveir framúrskarandi alþjóðlegir fræðimenn framsögu. Bæði erindin byggja á hugmyndum Deleuze. Í fyrra erindinu „The problem of existence in the age of capitalism“ skoðar Ian Buchanan hugtakið „affect“ (hrif, áhrif). Hugtakið hefur vakið athygli víða undanfarin ár, ekki síst innan félagsvísinda. Óhætt er að fullyrða að hugmyndir Deleuze og Félix Guattari (1930–1992), meðhöfundar hans, leiki hér stórt hlutverk. Buchanan heldur því hins vegar fram að þrátt fyrir þetta, hafi hugmyndum þeirra enn ekki verið gerð nægjanlega góð skil og í því felist ýmis tækifæri. Áhrifa Deleuze gætir víða innan femínisma, og í erindi sínu „Delirium and Revolutionary Love - A New Direction for Deleuzian Feminism“ fæst Janae Sholtz m.a. við löngun, kynhneigð og ást í skrifum Deleuze og Guattari. Sholtz þróar í kjölfarið nýjar hugmyndir um femínisma er varða bæði nánd og náin tengsl.

Sjá nánari upplýsingar um erindin og fræðimennina hér að neðan.  

The problem of existence in the age of capitalism

by Ian Buchanan

Summary: Affect theory, it seems to me, has more or less the same status as assemblage theory: it is broadly recognised that it exists, but its precise configuration is unclear. Neither its ontological commitments nor its methodological requirements are universally agreed upon. It is generally agreed, though, that the field of affect theory began to take shape in the wake of Brian Massumi's influential essay "The Autonomy of Affect". However, despite Massumi's prominence in the field of Deleuze and Guattari studies it would not – I think – be unjust to say that Massumi's goal in that and subsequent work is to develop his own theory of affect rather than elucidate Deleuze and Guattari's theory of affect. The same can be said of the entire field of affect theory which, like assemblage theory, occasionally acknowledges a debt to Deleuze and Guattari but does not see itself as being either explicitly derived from their work or in any way directly indebted to it. Most of the key contemporary affect theorists, such as Massumi, but also Lauren Berlant, Eve Kosofsky Sedwick, Elspeth Probyn, and Greg Seigworth (among many others), draw on Deleuze and Guattari's work at some point, but it cannot be said that Deleuze and Guattari are their most important influences, much less their definitive points of reference. The field of affect theory, as it has emerged over the past two decades, has obviously been fruitful and yielded a great many important insights into the state of contemporary society, but – putting my own cards on the table – I would argue it has also been something of a missed opportunity inasmuch that a great deal of what Deleuze and Guattari have to contribute to affect theory has been left unexplored and in many cases undiscovered. This should not be construed as a criticism of the field of affect theory, nor indeed of any the authors just mentioned; rather, it stands as an invitation to return to Deleuze and Guattari's work and inquire what their version of affect theory might entail.

Delirium and Revolutionary Love - A New Direction for Deleuzian Feminism

by Janae Sholtz

Summary: In Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus volumes, revolution, social transformation, and the possibility of a new future are all linked to desire: minimally, to the freeing of desire from the false refuges of Oedipalization and its constructs of molar sexuality. Everywhere, they seek to uncover the potential of desire, sexuality, and love, asking us to consider that what we take to be the most personal is impersonal, how the most intimate is the collective and social. Thus, it calls us to rethink our material and affective relations and reconceptualize the sphere of intimacy itself. I develop the concepts of delirium and revolutionary love, suggesting that we interpret these as perpetual processes of transformation and conjugation, advocating for more nuanced, complex forms of subjectivity and for becoming more sensitive to the varying relational complexes within a given space in order to propose what I am arguing is a new direction in Deleuzian feminism. This direction gains its newness from both the extension of Deleuzian desire and from its return to several heritages of feminisms which have themselves been marginalized in the forward sweep of new materialist and posthumanist discussions.

Um fyrirlesarana:

Ian Buchanan is a Professor of Culture Studies at the University of Wollongong. Buchanan has published on a wide variety of subjects across a range of disciplines, including literary studies, cultural studies, communications studies, and philosophy. His most recent book is Assemblage Theory and Method: An Introduction and Guide. He is the author of the Oxford Dictionary of Critical Theory and the founding editor of the international journal Deleuze Studies.  He is also the editor of four book series: Deleuze Connections (Edinburgh UP), Critical Connections (EUP), Plateaus (EUP) and Deleuze Encounters (Continuum). Link to bio: https://scholars.uow.edu.au/display/ian_buchanan  

Janae Sholtz is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Alvernia University and the author of The Invention of a People, Heidegger and Deleuze on Art and the Political. She is also the editor of Deleuze and the Schizoanalysis of Feminism: Alliances and Allies for Bloomsbury and a special journal edition entitled Infinite Eros: Deleuze, Guattari, and Feminist Couplings. Link to bio: https://www.alvernia.edu/faculty-staff/janae-sholtz

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