concepts -

concepts

a travelogue
Buch | Softcover
406 Seiten
2024
Bloomsbury Academic USA (Verlag)
978-1-5013-7530-9 (ISBN)
36,15 inkl. MwSt
This book foregrounds that English monolingualism reduces both our linguistic and conceptual resources, presenting concepts from the cultures of 4 continents and 26 languages.

Concepts seem to work best when created in the interspace between theory and praxis, and between philosophy, art, and science. Deleuze himself had generated many concepts in this encounter between philosophy and non-philosophy, including his ideas of affects and percepts, of becoming, the stutter, the rhizome, movement-image and time-image, the rhizome. What happens, if instead of "other disciplines," we take other cultures, other languages, other philosophies? Does not the focus on English as a hegemonic language of academic discourse deny us a plethora of possibilities, of possible Denkfiguren, of possible concepts?

Each contributor explores ideas that are key to thinking in their language – about sound and silence, voice and image, living and thinking, the self and the world - while simultaneously addressing the issue of translation. Each chapter demonstrates that translation itself is a way of invention, rather than just a rendering of concepts from one system in terms of another. This collection acts as a travelogue. The journey does not follow a particular trajectory—some countries are not on the map; some are visited twice. So, there is no claim to completeness involved here—it is rather an invitation to answer to the call.

Bernd Herzogenrathis Professor of American literature and culture at Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main, Germany. He is the author of An Art of Desire: Reading Paul Auster (1999) and An American Body|Politic: A Deleuzian Approach (2010) and editor of The Farthest Place: The Music of John Luther Adams (2012) and Deleuze|Guattari & Ecology(2009). His latest publications include the collections The Films of Bill Morrison. Aesthetics of the Archive (2017), Film as Philosophy (2017), and Practical Aesthetics (Bloomsbury, 2020).

Acknowledgements
Dedication

Introduction
Bernd Herzogenrath (Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main, Germany)

1. Liana Psarologaki (Greek) (University of Suffolk, UK)
Anaesthesis, Sensoma, Veoma: Cyborg Life Modes of Immersion After Deleuze

2. Sebastian Wiedemann (Brazilian) (Pontifical Bolivarian University, Columbia)
Antropofagia: Devouring Experimentations of a Manifesto Towards a Kinosophy to Come

3. Ana Peraica (Croatian) (Danube University Krems, Austria)
Autofotografija, Or; a non-human selfie

4. Bhaskar Sarkar (Persian) (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)
Bazaar: The Persistence of the Informal

5. Helena Wu (Chinese) (University of British Columbia, Canada)
Be (Like) Water

6. Agnieszka Dytman-Stasienko and Jan Stasienko (Polish) (University of Lower Silesia, Wroclaw, Poland)
cmiatlo and swiecien : Jacek Dukaj’s Concepts in the Perspective of Philosophy of Visual Media and Telecommunication

7. Kajri Jain (Hindi) (University of Toronto, Canada)
Darshan: Vision as Touch and the Stakes of Immediacy

8. Budhaditya Chattopadhyay (Sanskrit) (Artist/ Independent Scholar, the Netherlands)
Dhvani: Resonance

9. Bernd Herzogenrath (German) (Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Gestell: Heidegger’s Cyborg and the Vicissitudes of the Machine | Body

10. Woosung Kang (Korean) (Seoul National University, South Korea)
Gong | Saek: The Ineffable Persistence of Becoming

11. Jukka-Pekko Puro & Veli-Matti Karhulahti (Finnish) (University of Turku, Finland)
Hiljaa: Silent and Slow Media Use

12. Babson Ajibade (Yoruba) (University of Cross River State, Nigeria)
ko ko kà, the Sound of Colonial Shoes – Forgotten Words of a Yoruba Song of Success

13. Holger Schulze (French/ German) (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
L'Implèxe: What's in a Situation?

14. Erik Steinskog (Norwegian) (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Ljom – A Meditation

15. Soudhamini (Sanskrit) (Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia)
Maya: A Measured Response to and in Cinematic Virtual Reality

16. Jukka Sihvonen (Finnish) (University of Turku, Finland)
Mediataju: A Sense of Media

17. Vít Pokorný (Czech) (UJEP Ústí nad Labem & the Institute of Philosophy AS CR, Czech Republic)
Myslet médii. Thinking In, With or Through Media: Images, Interfaces, Apparatuses

18. Behrooz Mahmoodi-Bakhtiari (Iranian) (University of Tehran, Iran)
Naqqali: Iranian Storytelling in Two Films by Ali Hatami

19. Gretchen Jude (Japanese) (University of California, Davis, USA)
Nikusei: The Fleshly Voice

20. Julia Vassilieva (Russian) (Monash University, Australia)
(OTKAZ): From Expressive Movement to a Figure of Thought

21. Mohammad Hadi (Persian)
or rend

22. Didi Cheeka (The Twi language of the Akan people of Ghana) (Filmmaker/ Critic, Nigeria)
Sankofa- A Synthesis

23. Susana Viegas (Portuguese) (Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Portugal)
Saudade: (De)Mythologizing a Portuguese concept

24. Lorenz Engell (German) (Bauhaus-University Weimar, Germany)
Schalten und Walten: Towards Operative Ontologies in the Digital Iconosphere

25. Sebastian Kawanami-Breu (Japanese) (Tokyo University, Japan) and Shintaro Miyazaki (University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland)
Seken: Webs and Networks of In-Betweenness

26. Victor Fan (Chinese) (King’s College London, UK)
Tathagatagarbha: Translating the Untranslatable

27. Bogdan Deznan (Romanian) (University of Bucharest, Romania) and Andrei Ionescu (Independent Scholar, Romania)
Todetita: Facebook’s Ontological Malady

28. Lucia D’Errico (Italian) (Orpheus Institute, Belgium)
Togliere di scena

29. Chantelle Gray (Nguni language group) (North-West University, South Africa)
Ubuntu: Be-ing Becoming (Capable of Being Affected)

30. Suk-Jun Kim (Korean) (University of Aberdeen, UK)
Uri: Sound and the Porous Self

31. Andreas Jacobsson (Swedish) (Karlstad University, Sweden)
”Utbrytningsdröm”: Swedish Audio-visual Expressions of a Desire for Leaving Far

32. Rick Dolphijn (Dutch) (Utrecht University, the Netherlands)
Wellevenskunst

33. Cora Bender (Transcultural) (Universität Siegen, Germany)
Line and Bump

Contributors
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Thinking Media
Zusatzinfo 22 bw illus
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 140 x 216 mm
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Philosophie der Neuzeit
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Medienwissenschaft
ISBN-10 1-5013-7530-X / 150137530X
ISBN-13 978-1-5013-7530-9 / 9781501375309
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich