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This paper focuses on an ongoing project that began in 2012, entitled "The Collection of Jane Ryan & William Saunders". This project is an attempt to reconstitute the Marcos Collection. Sourced from auction catalogues, museum archives, and scant government records, their lavish inventory of commissioned portraits, jewellery, Regency silverware, and old master paintings is reproduced as photographic installations, postcards, and three-dimensional prints. Reconstruction, in this instance, becomes a sustained democratic gesture, allowing an increasingly forgetful public to access a collection that has remained unavailable through a systemic failure by successive post-dictatorial governments to institutionalize collective acts of remembering.
This essay analyzes the semantics of fog in the context of neoliberal austerity in Portugal. Drawing on portraits of young Portuguese in the style of vignettes, the essay historicizes the political and epistemological uses of fog as a medium. Attending to the materiality of fog - a blurring through which visibility occurs - the argument unearths the logical structure of recurrence in and as crisis as it affects the powers of decision-making. The goal is to push the limits of this recurring structure into the present, in order to better expose how two seemingly opposite historical eras - authoritarianism and neoliberalism - share, in fact, the enduring structure of potentiation in language and governance.
The Atlas Group created a digital mixed-media archive of contemporary Lebanese history, made up of produced and found documents. These archives look immediately ambiguous: they don't collect historical documents; they actually contain visual artefacts created by the Lebanese artist Walid Raad. These digital mixed-media archives - partly accessible on the web but also physically exhibited and performed - are not intended to preserve the memory of the past, but they become indeed useful to actualize history by giving it back in the form of a historical fiction. What if archives should not deal with memory, but with amnesia? And what kind of historical temporality do they re-activate?
The reactivation of Rudi Fuchs' 1983 exhibition 'Summer Display' took place in 2009 as part of the collection series, 'Play van Abbe part 1: The Game and the Players', and was entitled 'Repetition: Summer Display 1983'. The reconstruction questioned the codes and systems used within (but also consciously and unconsciously outside) the museum and raised several questions, including: what story did the original composers want to tell, and how can this piece of history be understood today? Is the new presentation a separate exhibition entirely or a copy of the 'original' one? What is then the difference between the idea of copy, repetition, and reenactment? And what is the role of the museum's archive in the process of restaging? What can curatorial institutional archives tell us about the museum itself?
This article examines striking similarities between stereotypical characters in Caroline Lee Hentz's US-American plantation novel "The Planter's Northern Bride" (1854), and Charlotte Brontë's classic "Jane Eyre" (1847). Especially, a connection can be made between Hentz's Italian "Madwoman in the attic" Claudia, and Brontë's transatlantic Caribbean counterpart Bertha. An intersectional methodology performed through a close reading will show how both women are literally and metaphorically trapped within spaces and stereotypes. This article transfers imagology into a global setting while extending its scope beyond investigating national characteristics.
In this fifteen-minute lecture-performance, Malin Arnell presents her dialogue with the work of French-Italian artist Gina Pane (1939–1990). Oriented around textual and visual traces of Pane and Arnell's historical intra-action, this ongoing dialogue explores performance art documentation and historical narratives. The project interrogates the operations of archives, asking: 'How do queer feminist performance archives make you vulnerable, how do they make you feel, act, react?' 'Whose bodies remain present, and which bodies are lost?' The framework of the work - its repetition with variations and its artistic and queer feminist methodologies - enables an exploration of history, documentation, and bodily epistemology as an attempt to take responsibility for what is not known by doing, through action - through performance.
This chapter identifies two contrasting methodological reductions utilized in philosophical scepticism: withdrawal/doubt [R–]; immersion/attention [R+]. Moving toward a feminist ethics grounded in phenomenological scepticism, Aumiller explores how reduction relates to experiences of personal and global uncertainty such as a pandemic. Reduction involves our entire embodied being, challenging how we are fundamentally in touch with the world. How we respond to being disrupted makes all the difference.
Aumiller writes lists to externalize what overwhelms her. To be in control. To master and move on. Yet, her lists circle back to her. The process of writing the same list every day or the same act of writing the list is a looping. She returns to herself, to the parts she can remember and to the parts she can't remember, but also can't leave behind.
Der Literaturwissenschaft des frühen 20. Jahrhunderts gilt das Interesse des Beitrags von Eva Axer. Sie untersucht in erster Linie die Kategorie der 'inneren Form', die neben der Literatur- auch die zeitgenössische Sprachwissenschaft beschäftigte. Im Werk Wilhelm Scherers, Reinhold Schwingers und Oskar Walzels werde die 'innere Form' emphatisch als eine in sich geschlossene Sinneinheit literarischer Texte konzipiert, die den Blick auf den Aufbau und eine Beziehung der Teile untereinander indes keineswegs ausschließe. Prinzipiell werde die 'innere Form' als ein den Teilen vorgängiges Ganzes gedacht, der ein hohes Maß an Dynamik eigne. Die Hoffnung auf eine innere Einheit des Werks erweise sich in der Regel allerdings als so mächtig, dass Wechselbeziehungen zwischen Innen und Außen, materielle Bedingungen oder funktionale Beziehungen der Literatur in dieser wissenschaftlichen Tradition keine systematische Berücksichtigung finden könnten.
Can reenactment both as reactivation of images and restaging of exhibitions be considered an alternative way of tackling the critical task to re-present art history (i.e., to present it anew) in the here and now, over and over and over again? The gesture of restoring visibility to something no longer present, reactivating or reembodying it as an object/image in and for the present, is here proposed as a (political) act of restitution and historical recontextualization. Examining the boundaries between past and present, original and copy (as well as originality and copyright), repetition and variation, authenticity and auraticity, presence and absence, canon and appropriation, durée and transience, the paper focuses on remediation, reinterpretation, and reconstruction as creative gestures and cultural promises in contemporary art practice, curatorship, and museology.
The reactivation of time
(2022)
Reappropriating, restaging, revisioning, remediating: at the crossroad of the new millennium, reenactment has undoubtedly emerged as a key issue in the field of artistic production, in theoretical discourse, and in the socio-political sphere. Taking an ever larger distance from notions of historical revival and 'Living History', current reenactments call into question whether the present can unpack, embody, or disentangle the past. Accordingly, to reenact is to experience the past by reactivating either a particular cultural heritage or unexplored utopias. If to reenact means not to restore but to challenge the past, history is thus turned into a possible and perpetual becoming, a site for invention and renewal.
Mafrouza is a twelve-hour-long documentary by French director Emanuelle Demoris, shot in a now-demolished neighbourhood in Alexandria, Egypt. Demoris is one of a long chain of western filmmakers who appeal to some form of 'taking one's time' as an instrument for - morally, politically, epistemologically - adequate representation. Based on the work of Trinh T. Minh-ha, Eduard Glissant, and Poor Theory, this chapter evaluates what happens when a film adopts a strategy of deferral in cases in which it is not clear how questions of 'doing justice' could be resolved. Using long duration and an insistence on the quotidian, Demoris's film forces us to think about the conditions that make pronouncements about character, situation, and narrative possible, continuously postponing the moment when it will become possible to say: 'this film is about …'. By setting itself up for failure, the film proposes one possible approach to the ethics and politics of visibility.
Roman Bartosch assesses the pedagogical potential of literature and the role of literary studies in an age of climate change, biodiversity loss, environmental destruction and degradation, and animal death and suffering. As he points out, these developments and students' responses to these various crises have received little or no attention in most educational contexts. Furthermore, many of today's curricular goals are essentially useless and meaningless for students facing an uncertain future. Bartosch asks us to reconsider what education could and should be in the Anthropocene, to acknowledge students' needs, and to reflect on why and how we teach literature and literary HAS in particular. As he also shows with his reading of Max Porter's novel "Grief Is the Thing with Feathers" (2015), engaging with literary and cultural animals can be a means to "[cultivate] an interest in acts of relating animality and textuality in ways that open up ambiguity and, thus, imaginative spaces for potential conviviality and flourishing." In contrast to the current emphasis on competencies, solutions, and teleological thinking, this kind of learning, Bartosch suggests, "is geared toward bearing witness, ruminating on its meanings, and thus repositioning oneself within a larger web of ecological and semiotic diversities under threat." Teaching literary HAS and emphasizing "[c]apabilities, resilience, and multispecies flourishing," then, could be important means of preparing students for the uncertain and perilous times ahead.
Liza B. Bauer looks at science fiction or speculative fiction writing - the literary genre par excellence for exploring alternative models of human-nonhuman coexistence. In her article "Reading to Stretch the Imagination: Exploring Representations of 'Livestock' in Literary Thought Experiments," she dissects processes of reciprocal negotiation between human and nonhuman beings in texts such as Sue Burke's "Semiosis" and Margaret Atwood's "Oryx and Crake" and "The Year of the Flood." Following Brian McHale's and Donna Haraway's credo that highly unlikely worlds encourage readers to critically reflect on current realities, Bauer addresses the following questions: What if chickens, cows, or pigs had the chance to exist for their own ends? What would happen if they could communicate in human language? Or if they were of superior intelligence? Would they subdue humankind, domesticate their co-inhabitants, or coexist harmoniously? By enacting these scenarios in literary storyworlds, SF proves to be particularly fertile ground, yielding insights into the current and future challenges of coexistence. As Bauer convincingly outlines, immersing ourselves in (science) fictional worlds to practice multispecies living does not seem too far removed from reality. The redistribution of animal agency shows that the passivity to which most livestock animals are condemned is not irrevocable. The well-being of both human and nonhuman animals will depend on whether it is possible to theoretically and practically broaden students' understanding of these entanglements. Since alternatives to animal commodification are thinkable in experimental SF storyworlds, they could constitute, Bauer argues, a significant step toward abolishing animal exploitation.
The chapter explores the dimension of the living present as a form of temporal reduction, looking at its manifestation in literary texts. Bazzoni proposes here a focus on the living present as different from a still, eternal moment, and contrasts the experience of the living present with the reduction at play in trauma. Finally, the author discusses the affective, ethical, and political dimensions of the temporality of the living present as a site of subjectivation, which effects a counter-reduction of normative discourses.
This article applies imagology to "migration literature" - a genre that is described as a "peripheral phenomenon" in the 2007 handbook "Imagology", but that requires more thorough attention due to the increasing number of significant writings by immigrant authors. Focusing on works by Rafik Schami, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Amara Lakhous, Igiaba Scego, Hatice Akyün, Yoko Tawada, and Emine Sevgi Özdamar, and considering theoretical observations by Edward Said, Salman Rushdie, and Homi Bhabha, this article analyses how most texts prefer arguments and metaphors of everyday life to the traditional images and stereotypes of nationalistic discourse. It concludes by distinguishing two perspectives central to most of them: that of an "in-between" and/or a "Third Space."
Siarhei Biareishyk beschäftigt sich mit Spielarten der Kritik an der platonischen Ideenlehre, die er von der epikureischen Tradition über Spinoza bis hin zu Deleuze verfolgt. Diese habe ein Denken von prozessualer und "modaler Ganzheit" ("modal whole") herausgebildet, das gerade auf die Instabilität und die Endlichkeit des Ganzen abhebe. Damit arbeite sie der Vorstellung sowohl einer möglichen Pluralität von Ganzheiten als auch der einer inneren Heterogenität jedes einzelnen Ganzen bis heute überzeugend zu. Im Gegensatz zu einem von vornherein als übersummativ konzipierten Ganzen entfalte diese Tradition Formen des Ganzen, die dynamisch sind und sich prozesshaft konstituieren. Biareishyk versteht das als Chance, Diversität und Disparatheit philosophisch fundieren zu können, ohne die Hoffnung auf Ganzheit(en) preisgeben zu müssen. Lukrez und Spinoza attestiert er auf diese Art und Weise philosophisch wie politisch ein ganz ähnliches Potential wie das, das Latour oder Cuntz in der Leibniz'schen Monadologie sehen.
Italy has experienced a high number of earthquakes. However, the identity of "the Italians" has not yet been defined by their "landscape of wounds." Referring to an earthquake in central Italy (Amatrice) in August 2016, the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo published a controversial caricature of two wounded Italians standing alongside the "Lasagnes," a pile of bodies layered like the well- known Italian pasta dish. By analysing the caricature's text, intertext, and context, while drawing on imagology and geopoetics, this article aims to show how earthquakes are linked to Italian cultural stereotypes and national identity.
Locating authenticity in artworks that are remade (all or in part) or re-performed over time presents a unique challenge for art conservators, whose activities have traditionally been oriented toward caring for the material aspects of art objects. The paper offers a brief overview of perspectives on authenticity and discusses various theoretical models that have been developed to conceptualize how media, installation, and performance artworks are displayed and cared for over time. These include the score/performance model, the concepts of autographicity and allographicity, the concept of iteration, and authenticity as a practice. The author proposes a theoretical model based on the ritual aspects of presenting artworks, arguing that authenticity, repetition, and community participation can be reconciled within a ritual context.
In the age of pervasive computing the way our body interacts with reality needs to be reconceptualized. The reduction of embodiment is a problem for computer music since this music relies heavily on different layers of (digital) technology and mediation in order to be produced and performed. The article shows that such a mediation should not be conceived of as an obstacle but rather as a constitutive element of a permanent, complex negotiation between the artist, the machinery, and the audience, aimed at shaping a different temporality for musical language (as the Italian artist Caterina Barbieri develops).
This chapter examines the meaning of the term 'aperire' ('to open') in the schools of the twelfth century and within early scholastic thought. It argues for a shift from a traditional understanding of opening as a revelation received from God, towards a more technical definition of opening as applying dialectical logic to a text. The act of opening was employed polemically, both in debates between scholastic masters and to distinguish Christian from Jewish exegetical practices.
Teaching empathy and emotions : J. M. Coetzee's "The lives of animals" and human-animal studies
(2022)
In "Teaching Empathy and Emotions: J. M. Coetzee's 'The Lives of Animals' and Human-Animal Studies," Alexandra Böhm focuses on one of the most influential novels in the field of HAS. In her article, she delineates the two main difficulties in teaching Coetzee's text: firstly, the text's protagonist, fierce and fearless Australian author Elizabeth Costello, is often less-than-lovable and offers few grounds for identification; secondly, the text's multilayered structure further problematizes the authorial voice. However, by focusing on Costello's reassessment of emotion and empathy, Böhm convincingly demonstrates that Coetzee's text offers possibilities for understanding the key concepts of HAS, such as animal agency, alterity, and the necessity of assuming a non-anthropocentric perspective. In the narrative, Costello employs empathy in her approach to animals, but is this also true of the metadiegetic level of Coetzee's text? Does the text itself suggest how to teach empathy? Alexandra Böhm demonstrates that it is possible to elicit affective responses to these questions through emotion journals and role-playing.
Rüdiger Campe argumentiert für die Kontinuität der Rhetorik über die Zäsur von 1800 hinweg. Gegenläufig zu Martin Urmann setzt er jedoch an der bei Descartes und Lamy abgewerteten Übung an, die im Zuge der Bildungsreform endgültig von der Bildfläche verschwunden schien. In der Moderne knüpft allenfalls Raymond Queneau mit seinen "Stilübungen" (1947) an die sich in der französischen Tradition länger erhaltene Praxis an, aber das wohl eher unter ästhetischen als rhetorischen Gesichtspunkten. Dass die Überführung schulischer Übungen in ästhetische Verfahren und stilistischen Ausdruck im modernen Sinne einen Zusammenhang bilden könnten, den Baumgartens Ästhetik von 1750 noch einmal pointiert, war trotz der jüngeren Forschung zu Baumgarten, die seine Bedeutung für das Fortleben der Rhetorik in der Moderne immer wieder hervorgehoben hat, allenfalls zu ahnen. Der Zusammenhang war gleichsam blockiert durch die historische Zäsur, die Rhetorik von Stil trennt, denn in der Folge hat Stil es nicht mehr mit rhetorischen Regeln, sondern mit Dialektiken von Norm und Abweichung zu tun. Diesen ganzen Bereich nennt Campe die taxonomische Dimension des Stils. Und sie trägt auch Verantwortung für die im 20. Jahrhundert notorische Inkriminierung von Stil als verkapptes Machtinstrument. Sehr deutlich wird diese Abwehr beispielsweise an Theodor W. Adornos gespaltenem Verhältnis zum Stil. Campe ergänzt die taxonomische Dimension des Stils um eine praxeologische - prominent verkörpert im Begriff der Schreibszene - die direkt aus der rhetorischen Praxis kommt. Was später Stil sein wird, ist in der Rhetorik nicht in den Regelwerken, weder in der Tropenlehre noch in den 'genera dicendi' zu suchen, sondern in der Praxis, die 'hexis' heißt und eigentlich das Wesen der Rhetorik ist. Dem Eindruck eines radikalen Bruchs entgegen hat das Üben nicht aufgehört und insistiert noch dort, wo es mit 'Werken' im modernen Sinne um etwas anderes zu gehen scheint.
Kinetic and programmed art has been a trend of contemporary arts that flourished in the 1950s and 1960s. Kinetic artworks often incorporated technology, at that time still immature, and involved the audience in the production of visual, sound, and somatic effects. Gruppo T was the pioneering group at the forefront of this groundbreaking vision of art as reproducible, participatory, and interactive. Through an action research project and the methodological tool of reenactment, a group of researchers, designers, and artists has proposed an alternative way to conserve Gruppo T artworks. The project 'Re-programmed Art: An Open Manifesto' originated from the ephemeral and experimental features, as well as fragility, of the works by Gruppo T - that is, from the difficulties of practice, conservation, technology, and market that have confined them for far too long to the margins of mainstream art history. We conceive reenactment not just a mere restaging but as re-designing, re-thinking, updating, and reprogramming a series of works by Gruppo T.
The "World Geography" ("Wanguo dili quanji" 萬國地理全集) published in 1844 by the Protestant missionary Karl F.A. Gützlaff was the first geographical account to introduce some European ethnotypes to China. Based on recent archival findings, my article compares this book with both its presumed Western source and its rendering in the 1847 edition of Wei Yuan 魏源's "Maps and Documents of the Maritime Countries" ("Haiguo tuzhi" 海國圖志). It thus explores the role that interlingual and intralingual transfers respectively played first in negotiating and then renegotiating two European stereotypes in their early travels to and within the Qing empire.
The present essay engages with the short story 'The Burrow', written by Franz Kafka between 1923 and 1924, a few months before his death. The ambiguity of the original title, 'Der Bau', which defies translation by pointing at the same time at a construction and an excavation work, anticipates the multilayered image of the burrow itself. While both nature and function of the burrow are hard to pinpoint (is it a dwelling, a shelter, a fortress, a labyrinth, a ruin?), the initially reported success of its construction is revealed as illusory, thus prompting the ongoing first-person narration of the incessant builder's work. Similarly unsuccessful is any attempt of the reader to attain metaphorical closure. In the light of other impossible, i.e., unfinished, bound-to-fail, ruinous, or selfdismantling structures portrayed by Kafka, as well as on the background of coeval texts by Paul Valéry and Georg Simmel, the essay investigates the wide and deep significance of the burrow’s countering the classical ideal of architectural wholeness.
Structural anthropology remains a hidden influence in Frantz Fanon's theory of the 'sociogenesis' of mental illness. This chapter outlines how Fanon's belief in the therapeutic capacity of 'socialization' critically absorbs Claude Lévi-Strauss's examination of the link between 'madness' and the symbolic structure of society. These innovations, Chamberlin argues, pushed Fanon to institute 'semihospitalization' as a radically dialectical method of treatment in his final role as a clinician at the Neuropsychiatric Day Centre in Tunis (1958–60).
Law is other wor(l)ds
(2022)
This paper turns to the thought of Yan Thomas to address the way of constructing categories and operating through them that is typical of law. The art of law displays a special quality: the reduction of the 'things' of the social world through the construction of categories, and the use of these same categories to conduct legal operations. The paper argues that the quintessential legal performance is instituting, and it finally asks how to exercise a legal imagination for Gaia.
This article aims to show that imagology is a promising method for analysing images of the European Other and the Turkish Self as expressed in Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar's novel "Huzur" (1948; trans. "A Mind at Peace", 2007). The narrative challenges the rhetoric of early Turkish nationalism by promoting a synthesis of the national present with both the melancholically evoked Ottoman heritage and with European cultures. At the same time, the novel's protagonists stand for diverse and often contradicting conceptions of Self and Other and thus provide an insight into the various identity conflicts present in Republican Turkey.
This essay interprets Dante's "Commedia" as an 'open work' (Eco). It grounds its open-endedness in its representations of interruption: from fictional obstacles in the protagonist's path in the "Inferno" to the narrator's anxiety over unfinishedness in the "Paradiso". Taking its cue from Boccaccio's creative rewriting of Dante's life, the essay resists the pressure of 'total coherence' embedded in (and often projected onto) the "Commedia", in order to reclaim the material vulnerability of the text and of its author.
Michael Cuntz greift die Leibniz'sche Monadologie in systematischer Absicht auf. Zwar gehe es auch der Monadologie zunächst um die Organisation der Relationen zwischen Teilen und Ganzem. Allerdings trage Leibniz als "Denker des Fluiden" in diese Organisation keineswegs die heute selbstverständlich anmutenden Implikationen und Hierarchien ein. Moderne Dualismen und Binarismen, etwa der zwischen Natur und Kultur, besäßen für Leibniz noch keine Gültigkeit. Die Monaden selbst seien zudem als geschlossen und offen zugleich konzipiert. Jede Monade enthalte die Welt und alle anderen Monaden. Nicht die stabile Differenz, sondern die 'Faltung', die 'Korrespondenz' und die 'Ähnlichkeit' regelten in der Monadologie die Beziehungen. "Untrennbar und doch unabhängig von einander oder verschieden - diese vermeintlich paradoxe, komplexe Struktur der Relation" betrachtet Cuntz als deren aktuelle Provokation, über die man sich durch die für Leibniz maßgebliche Überzeugung einer 'Weltharmonie' nicht hinwegtäuschen lassen sollte. Die Monadologie könne nämlich einen bedeutenden Beitrag zur Verstärkung von Diversität wie zur Überwindung des Anthropozentrismus leisten. Hierfür sei jedoch der direkte Rückgriff auf Leibniz selbst vonnöten. Moderne Anverwandlungen seiner Philosophie etwa bei Gabriel Tarde oder Gilles Deleuze hätten die originäre Sprengkraft der Monadenlehre mitunter missverstanden, simplifiziert oder entschärft, dies gelte auch und gerade für Tardes Umstellung von der 'Harmonie' auf den 'Agon'.
What is an exilic law? The Talmud was itself located 'in exile' without ever being considered 'exilic': the self-representation of the Talmud is consistent with the idea that Jewish law might be redacted in diaspora but is still centred on the Temple of Jerusalem. Yet the Zohar offers a unique representation of Jewish law as a central legal product and a metaphysically exiled reality. Hence, Jewish law has not only been born 'in exile' but also has an 'exilic' nature. An exilic law, then, is a tenebrous 'path' that inverts the 'moral ways' of Jewish law, as it departs from the 'exilic centre' of Babylon and installs a 'non-exilic centre' on Mount Moria, where Isaac was almost sacrificed and the Temple of Jerusalem was erected. When Scripture is brought out in an 'exodus', it departs from the solid terrain of an 'exilic law' and radicalizes the event of Abraham's being called to sacrifice his own son by producing a notable inversion of the notion of 'literal sense'. And yet this 'literal sense' that has always been there had almost been neglected, just like a 'purloined letter' - in every sense of the expression.
In the reactivation of the feminist collective of artists Le Nemesiache, this paper looks at the tension between rhetoric and translation in relation to the dislocation of archival materials from their situatedness in place (Naples) and time (1970 to the present). Translation emerges as the conveyor of the conditions from which the addresser started, as well as the ones of the addressees, as a potential that takes place in the moment of enunciation through a plurality of subjects. Considering the epistemological tension between history and fiction, as well as the mediation that happens through the body and the different subjectivities triggered by intra-action, this essay will engage with the following question: if the archive is the memory, can dramaturgy and reenactment from the archive become the message of a prophecy?
Astrid Deuber-Mankowsky wirft einen Blick auf Alfred N. Whitehead und sein 1929 erschienenes Hauptwerk "Prozess und Realität. Entwurf einer Kosmologie". Zur Ausformulierung seines denkbar umfassenden Ziels einer "vollständigen" Kosmologie rekurriere Whitehead auf eine "systematische Philosophie des Prozesses". Whitehead sei davon überzeugt, dass die philosophische Erkenntnis sich den Ergebnissen der Relativitätstheorie und der Quantentheorie zu stellen habe und zugleich versuchen müsse, sich gegen deren Absolutheitsansprüche zu behaupten. Während die Quantentheorie gezeigt habe, dass sich kleinste Teilchen diskontinuierlich zueinander verhalten, beharre Whitehead auf der Möglichkeit, ein Ganzes zu denken und am "Prinzip der Kontinuität" energisch festzuhalten. Sein Bemühen ziele darauf ab, das berühmte, auch von Leibniz systematisch aufgegriffene Diktum "natura non facit saltus" wieder in sein Recht zu setzen. Die Spannung zwischen Kontinuität und Atomizität begreife Whitehead konsequent als "Komplementarität", ein entscheidendes Relais hierfür stelle seine Entdeckung der "realen Potentialität" dar. Anders als man vielleicht zunächst annehmen könnte, steht Whiteheads Interesse an Leibniz damit nicht in fundamentalem Widerspruch zu dem Latours, umso weniger als eine Zäsur zwischen Natur und Sozialem oder eine Einschränkung von Subjektivität auf den Menschen schon für Whitehead keine Verbindlichkeit mehr besaß.
Through various cases and instances, this essay opens with the question of biography and the demands of its form: that is, biography's attempt to reduce historical totalities to the page in moments of sudden condensation. It then introduces the figure of Charlotte Wolff (1897–1986), a doctor and later hand reader and sexologist, who appears on a diagram, constructed by Walter Benjamin in 1932, to map his life through his 'Urbekanntschaften' (primal acquaintances). It then seeks to transpose Benjamin's diagram into other linear forms, such as a family tree, a diagram of chemical affinity, and an astral chart, to add one: the diagram as a map of the hand. This opens up a number of temporal, historical, and epistemic reductions, or cases of reduction, in Wolff's work and beyond. It concludes with a particular moment in Wolff's biography - her arrest in 1933 and her escape to Paris - as a final instance of the line, as border.
Proust list impulse
(2022)
Lists litter Marcel Proust's pages of "À la recherche du temps perdu" ("In Search of Lost Time"), but also the works about it. This short contribution collects together a number of those lists, and offers some reflection on the list's place and function within the work, on the level of the sentence and as a form in its own right.
On the list
(2022)
This essay presents some thoughts about lists and draws on a range of material, from Lauren Berlant to George Perec. It acts as an introduction to a series of short meditations on individual instances of listing. Usually presented in a sequence and assembled according to some practical or conceptual necessity, lists offer the promise, perhaps the illusion, of keeping track, of bringing control to the flux of things and thoughts, of putting confusion to a halt. They relate to reduction in two ways: first, as a quantitative reduction - as a form of making smaller or less; and second, as a qualitative reduction - as a form of condensation to the most salient data.
Visual representations of sexual violence in the Bosnian War in Jasmila Žbanić's "Grbavica" (2006) and Angelina Jolie's "In the Land of Blood and Honey" (2011) reveal different dimensions of victim feminism. Both directors sought to raise awareness of the issue of wartime rape and to direct viewers' attention to the pain of the distant Other. An intersectional analysis of the two productions (one domestic and one US-based) helps convey the impact of national and gender stereotyping both on self-representations and on representations of Otherness. Moreover, the analysis of a cinematic response to the Western gaze encourages rethinking prevalent images of the so-called Balkans.
Images, the main object of imagological analysis, are by nature value-charged. Despite this fact, previous research has neglected the axiological foundations of imagology. This article discusses in brief some fundamental axiological questions of imagological investigations. The here analysed corpus includes an eighteenth-century visual-textual source (the so-called "Leopold-Stich"), and a famous imagological handbook ("Imagology", by Beller and Leerssen). The analysis starts with the problem of value connotations of the signifier of geocultural spaces and continues with a cluster of questions concerning the nature of value of imagotypical representations. The final part examines two relevant imagological phenomena—diachronic changes in evaluation of certain geocultural spaces and a somewhat opposite phenomenon of evaluative apriorism.
With this volume, the editors Katharina Edtstadler, Sandra Folie, and Gianna Zocco propose an extension of the traditional conception of imagology as a theory and method for studying the cultural construction and literary representation of national, usually European characters. Consisting of an instructive introduction and 21 articles, the book relates this sub-field of comparative literature to contemporary political developments and enriches it with new interdisciplinary, transnational, intersectional, and intermedial perspectives. The contributions offer [1] a reconsideration and update of the field's methods, genres, and theoretical frames; [2] trans-/post-national, migratory, and marginalized perspectives beyond the European nation-state; [3] insights into geopolitical dichotomies such as Orient/Occident; [4] intersectional approaches considering the entanglements of national images with notions of age, class, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity/race; [5] investigations of the role of national images in visual narratives and music.
System
(2022)
Das 'System' erregt starke Gefühle. Das gilt, nach wie vor, in der Wissenschaft, das gilt aber auch im Bereich des Politischen, wo 'das System' (früher) von links und (heute) von rechts abgelehnt wurde und wird. Auch wenn der Kampf gegen das 'Schweinesystem' dem Hass auf 'Systemparteien' und 'Systempresse' Platz gemacht hat - kühl abwägend oder unbefangen neugierig steht dem System niemand gegenüber. Es gehört zur Aufgabe einer theorie- und begriffshistorischen Annäherung an den Systembegriff, auch die starken Gefühle zu verstehen, die dieser hervorruft.
The question of home is a complicated one. While home is emplaced, the notion of home does not simply point to just a location. This chapter thus utilizes what I call the trope of the 'vignette' to look at the concept of home in order to identify some aspects of what constitutes and/or (re)creates it for displaced individuals. It does so by performing a close reading of key moments in the film "Salt of this Sea" by Annemarie Jacir and the collection of essays "The Idea of Home" by John Hughes.
Mit ontologischen Problemen des Ganzen beschäftigt sich Robert Matthias Erdbeer in seiner Untersuchung des modernen Computerspiels. Er knüpft dabei an moderne Spielkonzeptionen von Schiller über Gadamer bis hin zu Wolfgang Iser an, die das Spiel als Vermittlung von Verstand und Sinnlichkeit, Notwendigkeit und Freiheit, v. a. aber in der Koppelung von Vorhandenem und Möglichem einer außerordentlichen "ontologischen Belastung" ausgesetzt hätten. Diese Belastung setze das Computerspiel in seinem eigenen Medium konsequent um und fort. Beim Gaming gehe es um eine grundlegende "Inszenierung von Handlungsmodalität" im Sinn einer "kohärenten Selbst- und Welterfahrung". Ganzheit komme dabei insbesondere über das Weltmodell der virtuellen Storyworld, über das Selbst als Avatar und in der Reflexion und Gestaltung des Spiels als Integral der Medienkünste zum Ausdruck.
Die Struktur und ihr Stil : wie Schleiermacher zwischen Derrida und Saussure vermitteln könnte
(2022)
Manfred Franks Beitrag widmet sich mit "Struktur" einem Gegenbegriff zum Stil, um Friedrich Schleiermachers sprachtheoretisch begründetes Verständnis des Stils als eines individuellen Allgemeinen zu rekonstruieren. Dabei zeigt sich, dass Stil und Struktur sehr wohl kompatibel sind und zusammengedacht werden können. Allerdings gilt auch bei Schleiermacher, anders als bei Lamy auf eine und bei Luther auf andere Weise, dass der Stil nie direkter Ausdruck (hier: des Individuellen) ist, sondern eine Weise der Kombinatorik, die allein "divinatorisch" zu entschlüsseln ist. Für den Nachweis der Kompatibilität von Stil und Struktur beruft sich Frank vor allem auf den Erz-Strukturalisten Saussure, der hier in große Nähe zu Schleiermacher und polemisch in weite Ferne von Jacques Derridas Saussure-Deutung gerückt wird.
Mit Blick auf die neuere historiographische Entwicklung plädiert Marian Füssel für eine prozessuale Betrachtung des Ganzen. Nur dies erlaube die Aufsprengung des Gegensatzes zwischen einer Mikro- und einer Makroebene von Geschichte. Angesichts der Komplexität und der wechselseitigen Durchdringung historischen Geschehens - als Beispiele nennt Füssel Handel und Krieg - sei dieser Gegensatz nicht adäquat. Zu diesem Fazit gelangt Füssel, nachdem er prominente Ganzheitsvorstellungen unterschiedlicher Schulen der Geschichtsschreibung vom Historismus über die 'histoire totale' und die Sozial- bis hin zur Mikro- und Globalgeschichte vorgestellt hat. Historische Ganzheitsvorstellungen, die auf einer Vermittlung von Allgemeinem und Besonderem beruhten oder die dem Prinzip der Repräsentation verpflichtet blieben, muteten heute genauso unbefriedigend an wie solche, die undifferenziert "Fragmentierung, Dezentrierung und Pluralisierung" feierten. Die Kritik an herkömmlichen Ganzheitsvorstellungen der Historiographie ist für Füssel demnach nicht Anlass, das Ganze zu verabschieden, sondern, es zu rekonzeptualisieren. Dass auch Füssel mit dem Fokus auf den 'Prozess' jenes Phänomen als Chance für das Ganze begreift, das vormals oft als dessen Bedrohung identifiziert wurde, zeigt das Ausmaß der Umbrüche, in denen die Formen des Ganzen sich derzeit in praktisch allen geisteswissenschaftlichen Disziplinen offenbar befinden.
Greta Gaard shows how many of the key concerns and objectives of human-animal studies and of related fields such as critical animal studies can be traced back - sometimes directly, at times obliquely - to earlier forms of intersectional activism as well as scholarship by women on behalf of (non)human others. In her account of the emergence of human-animal studies as a distinct institutionalized discourse, Gaard stresses the important contributions made by feminist scholars working at the intersection of fields such as ecofeminism and critical race studies, as well as environmental justice and animal liberation movements. These perspectives have, Gaard argues, greatly contributed to the evolution of human-animal studies into a dynamic and increasingly transdisciplinary field. These developments have opened up numerous lines of inquiry regarding modes of oppression and exploitation across species lines for researchers and students alike while also pointing to, in very practical terms, numerous opportunities for sustainability initiatives, for example, on campuses. Perhaps most importantly, human-animal studies has, Gaard emphasizes, effectively dismantled dominant and destructive conceptions of Western identity, inviting us to reclaim and practice "ecological multispecies kinship, powering and re-storying our collective humanimal resistance and recovery in the Anthropocene."
A sense of repetition pervades contemporary South African political and cultural debate. Several recent studies have drawn attention to the fact that the renewed student protests since March 2015 parallel several features of the resistance and liberation movements of the 1970s and 1980s. At a pivotal position between the two moments of political struggle stands the 'miracle' of the peaceful transition in 1994. Within this set of circumstances a group of curators, artists, and writers, Gabi Ngcobo and Kemang Wa Lehulere, amongst others, formed a collective under the name CHR (Center for Historical Reenactments) in Johannesburg in 2010. The CHR has pursued several questions that interrogate the complexity of a shared memory bridging segregated Apartheid legacy: how do readings of the past inform contemporary urgencies, and what are the political potentials of artistic interpretations of histories? How do they participate in the formation of new subjectivities?
Zeitliche Prozesse können Formen das Ganzen mitunter vor erhebliche Herausforderungen stellen. Das zeigt sich insbesondere dort, wo das Ganze zum Zweck einer bildlichen Veranschaulichung fixiert werden soll. Historisch betrachtet lassen sich in den Beziehungen zwischen Ganzheit und Prozessualität ähnliche Entwicklungen feststellen wie in denen zwischen Ganzheit und Teil. Forderungen nach einer maximalen Integrität des Ganzen, die im Prozess eine Bedrohung oder Gefahr wittern, erweisen sich bei genauerem Hinsehen oft erst als moderne Perspektive. Folgerichtig lehnen sich aktuelle Ganzheitskonzeptionen an frühneuzeitliche philosophische Modelle (neben Leibniz gilt dies v. a. für Spinoza) an, wenn sie auf eine programmatische Versöhnung zwischen Ganzem und Prozess abzielen.