theoryverses-blog
theoryverses-blog
theory verses
23 posts
A project in "translation," lineating philosophy, and cutting language and ideas into verse paragraphs to explore what differences it can makes in rhythm and form, texture and text. Philosophy is poetic. Poetry is thinking in tunes.
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theoryverses-blog · 8 years ago
Text
Tao: a field of immanence in which desire lacks nothing
it would be an error to interpret courtly love
in terms of a law of lack or an ideal of transcendence.
The renunciation of external pleasure,
or its delay, its infinite regress,
testifies on the contrary to an achieved state
in which desire no longer lacks any­ thing
but fills itself and constructs its own field of immanence.
Pleasure is an affection of a person or a subject;
it is the only way for persons to "find themselves"
in the process of desire that exceeds them;
pleasures, even the most artificial, are reterritorializations.
But the question is precisely
whether it is necessary
to find oneself.
Courtly love does not love the self,
any more than it loves the whole universe
in a celestial or religious way.
It is a question of making a body without organs
upon which intensities pass, self and other-
not in the name of a higher level of generality
or a broader extension, but by virtue of
singularities that can no longer be said to be per­sonal,
and intensities that can no longer be said to be extensive.
The field of immanence is not internal to the self,
but neither does it come from an external self or a nonself.
Rather, it is like the absolute Outside
that knows no Selves because
interior and exterior are equally a part of the immanence
in which they have fused.
"Joy" in courtly love,
the exchange of hearts,
the test or "assay":
everything is allowed,
as long as it is not external to desire
or transcendent to its plane,
or else internal to persons.
The slightest caress may be as strong as an orgasm;
orgasm is a mere fact, a rather deplorable one,
in relation to desire in pursuit of its principle.
Everything is allowed: all that counts
is for pleasure to be the flow of desire itself,
Immanence, instead of a measure that interrupts it or delivers it to the three phantoms,
namely, internal lack, higher transcendence, and apparent exteriority.
If pleasure is not the norm of desire,
it is not by virtue of a lack that is impossible to fill
but, on the contrary, by virtue of its positivity,
in other words, the plane of consistency it draws
in the course of its process.
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theoryverses-blog · 9 years ago
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New Literary History after the end of the new
Now, two new things become possible
for the erstwhile critic on his way
to reincarnation
as a real artist
(a new Pinocchio syndrome perhaps).
The first is the invention of new texts:
you enlarge a piece of
Scythian jewelry
to the point
at which
it becomes the equal of
a monumental frieze
in another civilization.
The critic, then, by the invention
of new nomenclature and neologism,
and by the framing in a new paradigm
of aesthetic or cultural history, transforms
an inert text of some sort
into a bearer of new form
and new perception
and thereby transforms it into an object
of especial and hitherto untheorized significance.
That text then becomes a first of some kind,
and itself a paradigm and model of things to come,
as well as a privileged symptom of Zeitgeist.
Meanwhile that creation—in which the new significance of the curatorial role
can be identified, precisely as just such
a framing of objects that are to be
allegorically transvalued—is intimately related
to the other one that interests us here,
namely the invention of wholly new historical stories
about such objects—the creation of new ideas or concepts of literary or artistic history.
This is then why, in my opinion,
we cannot exactly write new literary histories today,
we cannot execute them in the way the older
framers of projects (artistic or not)
then patiently brought these first glimmering ideas to full realization
step-by-step and in concrete detail.
For such new ideas are not to be realized,
they are and remain purely theoretical,
the task
is to spring them onto the screen of consciousness
precisely as new ideas for this
or that new narrative paradigm of history.
What the writers of new literary history
have to do today is to invent new ideas
of literary history, to pursue the goal
of a Novum that is immediately recognizable as
something hitherto unthought about the process,
and whose examples are not pieces and segments
of the execution of that research so much as themselves
ideas that dramatize what such an execution would look like.
In other words, they try to show us what a carrying out
of this new idea of literary or artistic history would look like
if it really could be carried out (which it can’t be).
Now I have little enough time
to say why this is not relativism or fiction.
It must be marked by an imperative to multiplicity—
to invent one new idea for literary history
must be understood as calling for many more.
These then begin to stake out the bounds of the Real,
they approach it asymptotically
in their very variety and in their contradictions,
like the legendary blind men feeling
the equally imaginary elephant’s sensory properties
—tail, trunk, hide, tusks, and so forth—and reporting
back on their contradictory findings.
This is then the triangulation of the Real,
the identification of a heavy
yet invisible body at the heart of space
that moves all the counters and the pointers
on all the dials of the universe
in a barely perceptible yet inescapable way,
a uttering and a fluttering
through which the Real
becomes as
inescapable
as it is
unrepresentable.
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theoryverses-blog · 10 years ago
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Stuart Curran about Wordsworth
Nature is both prison-house
and unending repository of imagery, 
seducing us away from our spiritual essence 
and providing a continual means 
of rediscovering it.
This translates into the ongoing discovery of the self 
through the elemental friction of the dialectic, where
contrary rhythms arise almost
by chance into a complex pattern of
ambivalence, or where the balance is direct
yet perhaps conceals unplumbed depths
of psychic commitment, a grandiose
simplicity to its array of forces.
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theoryverses-blog · 10 years ago
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Poetic Thought - J.H. Prynne
What thereby vibrates on the page and in 
the mind of the reader, in knowledge and memory 
and moral understanding, thus does not belong to the poet, 
not any more; it does not belong in the domain of the language 
system, not any more; it does not reside in the fabric 
of dispute about values or competing models of state control,
or visions of a future life. Even the conceptions 
of a public domain 
or an interpretative community 
cannot claim to be its necessary housing, any more 
than a conjured posterity and its compact storage 
in face of the unknown.
These are the outer shells, 
of a dialectic energy working through the methods 
of poetic composition which cannot be defined 
or contained by its shells but must break them 
to become altogether new: new poetic thought.
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theoryverses-blog · 10 years ago
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Nothing - Three Inquiries into Buddhism
Contemporary European philosophy and critical theory have long had a robust engagement with Christianity, there has been no similar engagement with Buddhism—a surprising lack, given Buddhism’s global reach and obvious affinities with much of Continental philosophy. 
Focused on “nothing”—essential to Buddhism, of course, but also a key concept in critical theory from Hegel and Marx through deconstruction, queer theory, and contemporary speculative philosophy—the book explores different ways of rethinking Buddhism’s nothing. 
Through an elaboration of “sunyata,” or emptiness, in both critical and Buddhist traditions; an examination of the problem of praxis in Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis; and an explication of a “Buddaphobia” that is rooted in modern anxieties about nothingness, Marcus Boon, Eric Cazdyn, and Timothy Morton open up new spaces in which the radical cores of Buddhism and critical theory are renewed and revealed.
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theoryverses-blog · 10 years ago
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Keats for Beginners
Precisely because one is ignorant of all that one does,
of the significance of what one does
(such is the absence of oneself to oneself
that writing marks and preserves), one has a chance to begin,
even though in beginning one is exposed to an ignorance
that cannot fully be claimed. The politics of beginning
is offered as an attempt to preserve and pass along one's ignorance,
always also a sign of the very freedom to make a beginning,
and so a sign, a way of acknowledging, that others are,
that others precede and will come along after.
In this way beginning too may be
the displaced name for a linguistic predicament,
if also the condition of the possibility of politics—
a reminder that one is just beginning,
the most common and least possible thing to know.
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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Figural Relativism: or the Poetics of Historiography
we must refuse to admit
that history repeats itself
and we must patiently insist
that the cyclical vision
of Metahistory as a whole
is an optical illusion
generated by the
autonomization
of a set of phenomena – 
historiography
and theories of history.
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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Anima Poetae - Coleridge
"What a swarm of thoughts and feelings,
endlessly minute fragments, an, as it were,
representations of all preceding and embryos
of all future thought, lie compact in any one moment!
So, in a single drop of water, the microscope discovers what motions,
what tumult, what wars, what pursuits, what stratagems, what a circle-dance of death and life, death-hunting life, and life renewed and invigorated by death!
The whole world seems here in a many-meaning cypher.
What if our existence was but that moment?
What an unintelligible, affrightful riddle, what a chaos of limbs and trunk, tailless, headless, nothing begun and nothing ended, would it not be?
And yet scarcely more than that other moment of fifty or sixty years, were that our all.
Each part throughout infinite diminution adapted to some other, and yet the whole a means to nothing--ends everywhere, and yet an end nowhere."
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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non-Lockean stimulation
"The desire of man being infinite 
the possession is infinite
& himself Infinite."
Blakean economics
thus achieves an eternal equilibrium
expressed in the tract's conclusion as the
reworking of the central Christian mystery
into an image of sympathetic identification.
It is this absolute exchange that guarantees 
the value of Imagination; unsecured by sympathy,
the Poetic character's creative activity
is merely inflationary. 
The Romantic nature
of this system of valuation
is evident in the way in which
inherited hierarchy
is undermined: the distinction of kind
between God and man collapses
into a distinction of degree
as the traditional doctrine of incarnation
becomes proof of Blake's most unorthodox
assertions
of human
divinity.  
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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British Romanticism and the East
It was logically inevitably that a civilization believing itself unique would find itself drowned in the sum total of civilizations, just as personal boundaries would be swamped by over-flowing mobs and dislocations of the rational. All this together was called Romanticism, and it produced, through its many re– creations of the past, the present that propels us forward.
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
Quote
The promise of the return of the world can (& has always been) fulfilled by poetry. Even before the process of class struggle is complete. Poetry, centered on the condition of its wordness––words of a language not out there but in here, language the place of our commonness––is a momentary restoration of ourselves to ourselves.
George Bernstein, from "Three of Four Things," Content's Dream: Essays 1975-84
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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Agamben on Philology and History
Just as children, in games
and fairy tales, preserve
the world of myth
freed from its subjection to ritual,
transforming
the divinatory practice
into the game of chance,
the soothsayer’s rod
into the spinning top,
the fertility rite
into the circle game,
so 
philology
transforms mythic names
into words, 
simultaneously 
delivering history
from chronology
and mechanism.
What delineated
the tight linguistic 
chain of destiny
here becomes
the linguistic substance of history. 
Critical mythology
is the legacy left
by philology, in the form
of a vocabulary 
of Indo-European words,
like a new infancy
for Western culture. 
It must now
pass into
the hands
of poetry.
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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magical narratives
we may admit
the descriptive
value of the
post-structuralist
critique of the "subject"
without necessarily endorsing
the schizophrenia ideal
it has
     tended
          to project.
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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Art finds Institutional Recognition of its plight for Economic Necessity.
this is the point at which I must 
remind the reader
of the obvious;
namely, that this
whole global, yet American,
postmodern culture
is the internal and superstructural expression
of a whole new wave
of American military and economic domination
throughout the world:
in this sense,
as throughout history,
the underside of culture
is blood,
torture,
death,
and terror. 
Fredric Jameson, "The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism"
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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Minima Moralia #50
The demand for intellectual honesty
is itself dishonest.
Knowledge comes to us through a network
of prejudices, opinions, innervations,
self-corrections, presuppositions
and exaggerations,
in short
through the dense,
firmly-founded but by no means
uniformly transparent
medium of experience.
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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Horkheimer on Labor
I do not believe that human beings naturally enjoy working, no matter whether their work has a purpose or not. Originally, the position of man is like that of a dog you want to train. He would like to return to an earlier state of being. He works in order not to have to work. The reification of labor is a stage in the process that enables us to return to childhood, but at a higher level.
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theoryverses-blog · 11 years ago
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The Concept of Enlightenment
under the
pressure of
labor, through
the centuries,
pleasure
has learned self-hatred,
and therefore
in the state of
totalitarian emancipation
remains
mean and disabled
by self-contempt.
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