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Published: 01 November 2006
1. … you see him chuck something? Maybe landed by the fence; 2. “their hearts inside”; 3. We had to wait until ten until they took uur statements; 4. Every base offers stores. More
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Published: 01 November 2006
1. D’You have to shine that in our eyes?; 2. “their heads on hold”; 3. your eyes fixed on something, then rolled and you fainted. More
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2018) 14 (1): 78–89.
Published: 01 March 2018
... as it is found in Friedrich Schiller. If an autonomous subject possesses something exaggeratedly, superfluously, or irrationally elaborate, and if that subject further experiences ownership as liberation from the forceful demands of goal-oriented rationality and utilitarian thinking, then that something...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2021) 17 (3): 347–361.
Published: 01 November 2021
... the importance of Middle-earth to New Zealand's national identity in the twenty-first century. This hybrid identity was then articulated as something that stood against labor actions by film industry workers, culminating in citizen marches against local labor. It closes by exploring ways that the importance...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2006) 2 (2): 213–224.
Published: 01 July 2006
...McKenzie Wark If game theory was objective, rational, abstract; gamer theory is subjective, intuitive, particular. If game theory starts with the self-contained agent, like a prisoner in a cell, looking out at the world; gamer theory wonders how the agency of the gamer comes into being as something...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2023) 19 (2): 177–199.
Published: 01 July 2023
... by Frédérique Aït-Touati, Alexandra Arènes, and Axelle Grégoire and a discussion of the Royal College of Art's architecture program's studio “Something in the Air: Politics of the Atmosphere,” the article focuses on framing of “problem spaces” (Celia Lury's term) through studio briefs as well as experimental...
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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2018) 14 (2): 139–152.
Published: 01 July 2018
... as president, and raise questions about whether he has betrayed his antiglobalist followers and is pursuing business-as-usual for global, corporate capitalism—or something else. This investigation also leads us into engaging the Trump campaign/administration connections with Russia and the role of Russia...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2011) 7 (3): 409–430.
Published: 01 November 2011
... isolates the phatic function in a way that turns communication into simulation. I conclude with the need for a strategy of reading Baudrillard on modeling that detotalizes simulation and allows for something of the symbolic to persist in communication. © BERG 2011 PRINTED IN THE UK 2011 modeling...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2011) 7 (3): 339–344.
Published: 01 November 2011
... of the university system would normally take the competitive examination known as l'Agrégation [Trans.]. This interview first appeared in Philosophie Magazine , no. 18, April 2008. Translated by Chris Turner J.B. : I think a form of vitality remains in every human being, something...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2014) 10 (2): 206–225.
Published: 01 July 2014
... the point of departure. An absolute given. Something that has already been there forever. TB: In this sense, could we say a non-singular individual? PV: Yes, we could. That is a good way of putting things. The individual who composes the multitude, to my mind, as the result of a process, has...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2006) 2 (3): 381–390.
Published: 01 November 2006
...1. … you see him chuck something? Maybe landed by the fence; 2. “their hearts inside”; 3. We had to wait until ten until they took uur statements; 4. Every base offers stores. ...
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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2018) 14 (1): 95–108.
Published: 01 March 2018
...-individualizes us and organizes us as a collective subject that produces another split: a gap between the word as it exists and something else; “instead of asserting unity, communists assert the gap” (255). More precisely, the party seizes this gap, intensifies it, and holds it open. This produces an affective...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2020) 16 (1): 14–23.
Published: 01 March 2020
... a manifesto, a lot of artists from a little earlier time wrote manifestos and they fully intended to change the world. And I think that that’s something that artists do. The Communist Manifesto actually became corrupt and destroyed some of the greatest art movements of the early twentieth century. You...
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Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2009) 5 (2): 179–198.
Published: 01 July 2009
... of something one might expect to see on the streets of Disneyland. In the clip from the episode made available by MEMRI-TV, Farfour and the child presenter ask a child caller how she will sacrifice her soul for al Aqsa, to which the caller replies, “I will shoot.” Then when asked further she replies, “we want...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2014) 10 (3): 262–274.
Published: 01 November 2014
... more than what something calling itself “complexity theory”—with its technicist and fix-up approach to the problems of today’s societies (or what it identifies as the core problems)—puts forward as its objective and program of action. The real issue, as far as contemporary social and cultural diversity...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2013) 9 (2): 203–211.
Published: 01 July 2013
... then be less something that holds between regimes and between genres and more an originary heterogeneity affecting the very identifiability of any regime and any genre, a kind of primary passive performativity always in tension with the “performativity” diagnosed and criticized in chapter 11 of The Postmodern...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2023) 19 (3): 297–317.
Published: 01 November 2023
...-expanding material and noetic volumes and thus scale up to the very biosphere that sustains life on the planet. Inasmuch as there is inextricable interconnection of these scales, any slice of the scaling process implies the others. Thus our emphasis in this article on the urban is something of an arbitrary...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2024) 20 (1): 183–187.
Published: 01 March 2024
... between the two is that childhood is integrated into the polis like the noise of words, pretending to be part of a language to which it never quite belongs; in a way, Ulysses , like so many other works of art, music, and literature, is also part of that noise. And, of course, there is something very...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2012) 8 (3): 375–384.
Published: 01 November 2012
... read so much psychology around 1800 and psychiatry around 1900. I'd like to see others do that. CW: You are a trained Germanist and Romanist… FK: Yes, that's something people keep misconstruing. As if it were a proven fact that in the late 1970s Parisian structuralism somehow erupted...
Journal Article
Cultural Politics (2025) 21 (1): 22–36.
Published: 01 March 2025
... out to praise Nancy's notion of bodies in “Corpus”: As a term for our dual access and non-access to bodies, Nancy selects the excellent name of touch. To touch something is to make contact with it even while remaining separate from it because the entities that touch do not fuse together. To touch...