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Guattari's Diagrammatic Thought
Writing Between Lacan and Deleuze
Guattari's Diagrammatic Thought
Writing Between Lacan and Deleuze
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Description
Guattari's Diagrammtic Thought examines the writings that Guattari authored on his own, both before and during his collaboration with Deleuze, providing a startlingly fresh perspective on intellectual and political trends in France and beyond during the second half of the twentieth century.
Janell Watson acknowledges the historical and biographical aspect of Guattari's writing and explores the relevance of his theoretical ideas to topics as diverse as the May 1968 student movement, Lacanian psychoanalysis, neo-liberalism, ethnic identity, microbiology, quantum mechanics, chaos theory, ecology, the mass media, and the subjective dimensions of information technology. The book demonstrates that Guattari's unique thought process yields a markedly Guattarian version of many seemingly familiar Deleuzean notions.
Table of Contents
1. Lacan's Couch, Guattari's Institution: Accessing the Real
2. The Cosmic Psyche: Capitalism's Triangular Traps
3. An Energetics of Existence: Creative Quadrants
4. History as Machinic Phylum: Socio-political Schemas Afterword: From Cartography to Ecology
Bibliography
Index
Product details
Published | 08 Mar 2009 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 228 |
ISBN | 9781441140760 |
Imprint | Continuum |
Series | Continuum Studies in Continental Philosophy |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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"This is an exacting explication of Guattari's key conceptual innovations over the course of his career. What emerges from the furious detail and clean disassembly of the nuts and bolts of schizoanalytic diagrams is an intellectual portrait of Guattari as a militant cartographer of a universe perfused with machines. Watson ingeniously reveals how Guattari hot-wired Lenin and Lacan for the wild ride he took into molecular revolution, the implications of which for emerging species of subjectivity we are only beginning to grasp." - Gary Genosko, Canada Research Chair, Lakehead University, Canada

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