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Journal Article
boundary 2 (2016) 43 (1): 173–208.
Published: 01 February 2016
... of what I call here black music's “secret animation.” © 2016 by Duke University Press 2016 animation slavery capitalism labor black music Black Music Labor and the Animated Properties of Slave Sound Ronald Radano...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (3): 97–103.
Published: 01 August 2009
...Jonathan Skinner For William Carlos Williams, poetry was a war machine, a “small (or large) machine made of words.” If the war is a human war on other species, do poetry machines become poetry animals? Can we read Christopher Dewdney's “Permugenesis,” Marianne Moore's “An Octopus,” or Francis...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (2): 133–153.
Published: 01 May 2010
... the subfield of media hauntology are still too anthropocentric, given the continued investment in human exceptionalism (albeit of an abject kind). Rather, the cybernetic interdependence of humans, animals, and machines should be fully acknowledged and appreciated in order to avoid the conflation of pathos...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2022) 49 (1): 263–292.
Published: 01 February 2022
... for mass audiences in greater China as well as abroad, raises the question of if and how an aesthetic of suppositionality is related to the emerging virtual realism enabled by computer‐generated imagery (CGI). The concept of suppositionality not only helps us to evaluate how contemporary Chinese animation...
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Journal Article
boundary 2 (2017) 44 (1): 191–212.
Published: 01 February 2017
... by the paleoanthropologist André Leroi-Gourhan, Stiegler argues that humans evolve biologically insofar as they are animals, but they become human only through technics. Through tools, we are able to take hold of our own future by reconstructing environments to which we are maladapted and by preserving values that we choose...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2018) 45 (4): 13–40.
Published: 01 November 2018
... response to Augustine. Like Augustine, Knausgaard explores the care that binds us to others and how the experience of time cuts through every moment. But while Augustine seeks to turn us toward eternity, Knausgaard turns us back toward our finite lives as the heart of everything that matters. The animating...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2019) 46 (4): 119–156.
Published: 01 November 2019
... sorrows of the early military regimes, to the infinite deferrals of justice that animated the neoliberal project. In closing, I examine solidarity responses to the 2014 attack on Gaza. Embodying the rejuvenation of joint decolonial struggle, they rupture the Zionist stronghold that has shaped dominant...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2020) 47 (2): 181–198.
Published: 01 May 2020
... and garners its effects from the division between value and disregard, things and persons, human and nonhuman. In analyzing how legal reasoning has historically contributed to literal expropriation, I examine the generally invisible nexus of animality, human marginalization, and juridical authority...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2020) 47 (2): 119–151.
Published: 01 May 2020
... of human-being through a consideration of human animality beyond the traditional divide between nature and culture. Copyright © 2020 Duke University Press 2020 humanism human-being human/animal history species References Benjamin Walter . 1996 . One-Way Street. In Selected...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2020) 47 (4): 63–99.
Published: 01 November 2020
... to further understanding of these novels and their wider bearing on human-animal relations. Building from the classical distinction between bios and zoē (political and “bare life”) described by Giorgio Agamben, this essay theorizes an occluded flesh that is violently excluded from discourse: xenoflesh...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2020) 47 (4): 1–24.
Published: 01 November 2020
.... Lilly’s work sits at the crossroads of many vectors in postwar American culture: the birth of the counterculture from the spirit of Cold War militarized science; the cybernetic dream of flattening the differences between animal, human, machine, and alien intelligence; the exploration of otherness through...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (2): 1–68.
Published: 01 May 2010
... such as Strange Country and Foreign Affections . Informed by a commitment to European and Irish republican values elaborated in the radical Enlightenment and animated by a sometimes bristling engagement with an Ireland transformed by the Troubles in the North and by the culture of late capitalism across...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2014) 41 (1): 79–100.
Published: 01 February 2014
... to be gathering momentum once again today: the issue concerning “man” vis-à-vis the shifting boundaries of the animal, the machine, and the divine. Inverted Forms and Heterotopian Homonymy: Althusser, Mamardashvili, and the Problem of “Man” Miglena Nikolchina...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (3): 1–17.
Published: 01 August 2015
... on the political practices and cultural values of other societies. These are values that have animated radical thinking globally for at least a century. The discussion explores the implications for radical thinking of the necessity of coming to terms with these new cultural challenges. © 2015 by Duke University...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2022) 49 (3): 147–154.
Published: 01 August 2022
...Jay Cantor Abstract In this version of a talk at the Norman O. Brown conference, Jay Cantor traces the path from Life Against Death into and through Love's Body to outline the liberatory impulse that animated Brown's entire opus. The anti-identitarian character of this liberation found Brown...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2023) 50 (3): 211–231.
Published: 01 August 2023
... the status of reassuring historical distance as a result of imperial ideological needs. Attention to the circuits of desire that animate claims to the past on the basis of identification and personal attachment can account for the attraction the Middle Ages exerts on both medievalists and white supremacists...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2024) 51 (1): 3–37.
Published: 01 February 2024
... and personal milestones becomes, then, the backdrop against which one can appreciate how much of her thinking and writing are critical reflections and analytical interventions on questions and themes that prevailed at a given juncture. Through Spillers's comments on what has animated her writings on the Black...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2002) 29 (1): 223–257.
Published: 01 February 2002
... studies of American modernism—even for a writer whose work is as full of close en- counters with animals both wild and domestic as Hemingway’s—is that the discourse of species, and with it, the ethical problematics of our relations to nonhuman others, continues to be treated largely as if species...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (4): 62–72.
Published: 01 November 2015
... there are sheep and cows and horses even though the authoritative bodies have done everything they can to remove their stables, their pastures, their menacing animal influence Thank you for the description But there are things that are still unclear Who do the white bodies belong to  Who do the beige...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (3): 157–170.
Published: 01 August 2015
... is happening in the molecular experiences arising between infrastructures in Tokyo: not the destruction of everyday life but its ongoing transformation into anti-production. © 2015 by Duke University Press 2015 broadcast television commuter networks mobile phones anime infrastructure Living...