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durational witness
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Journal Article
differences (2024) 35 (3): 139–149.
Published: 01 December 2024
...Leigh Gilmore This article reads the decades-long correspondence between Hannah Arendt and Mary McCarthy as an account, following Judith Butler. Specifically, it argues that an epistolary subject emerges through the shared act of durational witness enacted in letter writing. Reading...
Journal Article
differences (2011) 22 (2-3): 190–210.
Published: 01 December 2011
... difference. In order to track
this relationship, I focus on rhythm, what John Mowitt defines as “all the
elements that bear on the duration of sounds” (24).2 Rhythm, in the most
basic sense, denotes “palpability itself” (24...
Journal Article
differences (2017) 28 (3): 67–92.
Published: 01 December 2017
..., and bear witness to damaged life, a cinema of subjects who no longer know how to react to determinate perceptions or who no longer know what perceptions determined their actions and who are hence swallowed up into the temporal maelstrom of affect, memory, and thought. For Deleuze, it is Italian neorealism...
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Journal Article
differences (2013) 24 (1): 1–29.
Published: 01 May 2013
...: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies
2 Biopolitics
biopolitics the direct exercise of power on zoe, or bare life. We witness the
first, most explicit politicization...
Journal Article
differences (2007) 18 (1): 87–127.
Published: 01 May 2007
... and time as
duration. Digital real time and its transmission by the World Wide Web, by
telephone, and by satellite offers not only interaction but also immersion
as we become identified in the unthought of doing and being...
Journal Article
differences (2008) 19 (2): 35–53.
Published: 01 September 2008
... Development. 2000 . “The Slow Drowning of New Orleans.” Washington Post 9 Oct. 2005 : A1 . unesco. “ The Inuit, First Witnesses of Climate Changes .” unesco. New Courier. Nov. 2005 . http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=30532&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html . van Heerden...
Journal Article
differences (2011) 22 (2-3): 112–139.
Published: 01 December 2011
... oppositions: wakefulness/sleep; inside/outside; cause/disruption of causality; floating/fixation, location/dislocation; time/space; one/multiple; duration/intermittency, sound/silence; subject/Other; reality/fantasy, meaningless/meaning; sound/voice; “being and time,” “being and nothingness,” “being and event...
Journal Article
differences (1993) 5 (2): 1–23.
Published: 01 July 1993
... is assaulted by a modernity understood as disruption, speed, and anonymity. In order to buttress the failing notion of identity, there arose an entire psychology of identity based on a certain relation to temporality which demands both duration and continuity. The French sociologist Gabriel Tarde argued...
Journal Article
differences (2016) 27 (3): 45–92.
Published: 01 December 2016
... the fatal duration of women’s hysterical jubilation. Where is the point when laughter shifts from spontaneous pleasure to endless agony? This fatal turn—the prick or punctum of photography’s association with death 22 —never adheres to death from laughter, which uncannily resembles a cinematic discourse...
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Journal Article
differences (2007) 18 (1): 128–152.
Published: 01 May 2007
..., but remains as the witness of
an anteriority. Hence, this understanding of the index necessarily aligns it
with historicity, the “that has been” of Barthes’s photographic image. The
second definition of the index, on the other hand...
Journal Article
differences (2010) 21 (3): 73–96.
Published: 01 December 2010
... everywhere suggests the
critical labors of analysis and the unpacking of a textual structure. Disgust
involves a duration of interpretation toward the qualities of an object: in
other words, and unlike other modes of aversion, disgust...
Journal Article
differences (2023) 34 (1): 60–68.
Published: 01 May 2023
..., but by acknowledging ourselves as merely passing ephemera among a constellation or force field of other “forms and energies.” 3 This lowkey shift registers a turn from a propositional interrogation of the unknowable world to a sensual or pre-positional witnessing of it, a looking that presumes no horizons...
Journal Article
differences (2020) 31 (1): 1–35.
Published: 01 May 2020
... of communication” but instead through techniques of power that, in the modern period, govern and regulate life in new and increasingly totalizing ways: “Never [ . . . ] in the history of human societies,” Foucault writes, have we witnessed this “combination in the same political structures of individualization...
Journal Article
differences (2010) 21 (1): 178–193.
Published: 01 May 2010
..., not an actual. Events, he argues,
“are irreducible singularities, the ‘beyond-the-law’ of situations. Each
faithful truth-process is an entirely invented immanent break with the
situation” (Ethics 44). The subject who bears witness...
Journal Article
differences (2019) 30 (3): 92–117.
Published: 01 December 2019
... a position. The performance did not progress toward a climactic ending. Beckles breathed and stood as still as possible for a set duration. However contained, the performance evoked a more ambitious timescale. Beckles’s sustained breath showed her willingness to keep alive, in the present, the feminism...
Journal Article
differences (2008) 19 (1): 32–70.
Published: 01 May 2008
... opposite from the one taken by Sade’s most rigorous admir-
ers, who tend to see him as relentlessly opposed to all things purportedly
durational: familial generations, inherited property, even literature.8 But
in my view, in its very...
Journal Article
differences (2017) 28 (1): 17–36.
Published: 01 May 2017
... fleeting or gestural. It is literally “set in stone.” This very material of stone itself conveys the duration of time as endurance, as hardening. It also marks the evanescence of human temporality. “Time, how short,” it says. The mark of meaning also becomes a calcified gesture. As such it defies time’s...
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Journal Article
differences (2020) 31 (1): 98–134.
Published: 01 May 2020
... is dualistic, encompassing the potential harm experienced by performers and that inflicted in bearing witness (186). During the u.s . “sex wars” of the late 1970s and 1980s this question pervaded antipornography feminist activism and litigation, national government inquiry and scholarship. 3 For many...
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Journal Article
differences (2011) 22 (2-3): 249–275.
Published: 01 December 2011
... on production and audition.
Indeed, if in film sounds are turned toward significance and expression,
in the realm of music we witness a countermove toward and, I think, an
implied preference for insignificance and deconceptionalization...
Journal Article
differences (2005) 16 (1): 63–102.
Published: 01 May 2005
... she recognized
at once as those who, like herself and [her husband] Claud, had
always had a little of everything and the God-given wit to use it
right. [. . .] Yet she could see by their shocked...
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