Bloomsbury Home
- Home
- ACADEMIC
- Philosophy
- Aesthetics
- Schizoanalysis and Asia
Schizoanalysis and Asia
Deleuze, Guattari and Postmedia
Schizoanalysis and Asia
Deleuze, Guattari and Postmedia
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
This book is an update, extension and radicalization of Guattari’s philosophy of the postmedia. It is the first of its kind to comprehensively apply Guattari’s thought on postmedia to post-millennium technological developments. Given the considerable interest in Félix Guattari and Gilles Deleuze’s work and its influence in Asia and South-East Asia and beyond, the book is a timely contribution and update of Guattari’s essential concepts. It offers a fresh approach to applying Guattari and Deleuze to local contexts.
Both Félix Guattari’s schizoanalysis and Gilles Deleuze’s philosophy remain excellent tools to decode the politics of postmedia. The book centres around the influence of Guattari’s work on the Japanese archipelago and how Japan itself impacted on the work of Guattari in the 1980s. The book updates Guattari’s work and apply it to the problems which are affecting societies in Asia and beyond. It highlights current research on postmedia by scholars who are working to understand how Japanese society is functioning post-Fukushima and how the country continues to toil from the “geo-trauma” of the real.
Table of Contents
Preface by Toshiya Ueno
Introduction
Section 1: 'Japan'
1. Is the Otaku Becoming-Overman?
2. Guattari's 'Japan'
3. On the 'Schizophrenic Taste' for Spinozist Weapons
4. From the Exterminating Angel to Guattari's Scarecrow
5. Fukushima: The Geo-trauma of a Futural Wave
6. Guattari and Pachinko
Section 2: Postmedia
7. The Zerrissenheit of Subjectivity
8. Machinic Dopamine Junkies
9. Schizoanalysis of Pokémon Go
10. On the Disordering Ritornello of Graffiti
Section 3: Mental Ecology
11. Zhibo, Existential Territory, Inter-Media-Mundia
12. On Deadly Spirals of Ipseity: Hikikomori, Trauma, Resistance
13. On the BwO of the Hikikomori
14. On the Prospects of Virilio's Pedagogy of the Image
15. A Contribution to the Schizoanalysis of Indifference
Section 4: Aesthetics and literature
16. The Delirious Abstract Machines of Jean Tinguely
17. Ango the Schizo
18. On Nonhuman Machinic Love
Product details
Published | Nov 08 2022 |
---|---|
Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 1 |
ISBN | 9798881859695 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
From Otaku and Hikikomori to Pachinko and Pokémon Go, Joff Bradley carries out a schizoanalysis of a variety of social phenomena in neoliberal Japan, the country Guattari loved, but in an age quite different from his. This is a tour de force that opens up new issues surrounding media and art in today's globalized world—going beyond our archipelago.
Tatsuya Higaki, professor of philosophy, Osaka University
-
Joff Bradley’s work is remarkable for his incisive critiques and analyses, and this volume continues his rigorous work with an expansive understanding of Deleuze and, particularly, Guattari’s theory and practice of schizoanalysis. Bradley’s insights overcome interpretive noise by enlivening a reading of schizoculture as a vital event requiring an active practice of schizoanalysis to face our century.
Charles Stivale, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of French, Wayne State University
-
Joff P.N. Bradley has written a must-read guide for anyone considering Asia as a philosophical method. He provides us with neither stock answers nor the idle application of philosophical concepts for explaining the exotic. The entire scope of his book resists established regimes of knowledge and invents a new field of scholarship. His work cannot be reduced to a single discipline such as Asian Studies or Cultural Studies but instead practices the “minor” exercise of philosophy in Deleuze and Guattari’s sense.
Alex Taek-Gwang Lee
-
Joff Bradley's book ignites the explosive potency of schizoanalysis in Asia, not through displacing concepts but by charting new territories or paths beyond capitalist ennui. The author is an assortment, a heterogeneous assemblage of a philosopher, a “native stranger”, a cultural critic, and a romantic revolutionary. The delightful book manifests the molecular recombination of schizoanalysis, ecosophy, utopianism, and ethics, opening up the horizon of futural becomings.
Chun-Mei Chuang, professor of sociology, Soochow University, Taiwan
-
A brilliant and timely attempt to reinvent schizoanalysis to diagnose the profound harms inflicted by planetary capitalism, which has itself been obscured as the cause of all social ills by the ongoing plague and the war. While making good use of his outsider status in Japan in initiating his diagnosis, Bradley has crystallized insights for salvaging the whole planet overdosed by neoliberal viagara.
Hsien-hao Liao, Dean, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences; Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature, National Taiwan University

ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.