Non-Representational Theory: Space | politics | affect
(Massumi 2002), or the careful prepping of Bill Clinton’s body language in key television appearances (D. Morris 1999). Third, p ...
The technologies I have outlined were undoubtedly born in the USA but they are now diffusing to all democracies at greater or le ...
who would be most likely to win. But it is still a halting process to join prospects to actual political allegiances. For exampl ...
of media communication (Gillmor 200 4 )), on understanding diversity as a strength in composing will, on the importance of polit ...
some ways is as important as content (Goldfarb 2006). It is not, as some have claimed, a reformation or a transformation or a ne ...
Notes Preface 1 But I do not want to be misunderstood. Though rationality has become a difficult value to adhere to, not least b ...
originated in the Latin noun of action, vocare, meaning to call or summon. This meaning fits my purposes well. 9 Lotringer is re ...
32 See, especially, the book by Soden (2003) on falling. 33 Kwinter stresses the tool-less nature of this activity but this aest ...
50 See, in particular, work on the spaces of sound and especially the efforts to reconstruct historical soundscapes (e.g. B.R. S ...
continuing to exist. Rather it points to the construction of a novel overlay. The economy is heterogeneous and there is no reaso ...
21 What is interesting has been the way in which information technology has so rapidly become a pervasive feature of the design ...
4 This is a very different notion of metaphor from that employed by Lakoff and Johnson (1998) which seems to me to over-determin ...
4 This distinction between anthropological space and the geometrical space of grids and networks is taken from Merleau-Ponty (Co ...
and nonhumans as ‘the field within which both the determinations of objects and the doings and respondings of agents are intelli ...
4 ‘Now we have finally found [the Greek mathematician]: thinking aloud, in a few formulae, made up of a small set of words, star ...
abductions from indexes which are neither ‘semiotic conventions’ or ‘laws of nature’ but something in between. (1998: 15) It is ...
Classical Indian Dance, to mention only a few such examples. The act of witnessing, however, raises the stakes of audience engag ...
Fourth, there is a further paradox. Though Deleuze and Guattari work through a logic of multiplicity they proceed through carefu ...
22 But it cannot be reduced to it, not least because text itself tends to convey a dominant ideology of textualism. For example, ...
whole, ambiguous rather than clear, and interrupted rather than complete’ and it may be that here the feminine form is ‘without ...
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