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innervation

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Journal Article
New German Critique (2018) 45 (3 (135)): 39–72.
Published: 01 November 2018
...Matthew Charles Abstract Walter Benjamin refers to the “idea of revolution as an innervation of the technical organs of the collective” as one article of his politics. Drawing on some of the debates and tensions generated by the work of Miriam Bratu Hansen, the article analyzes lesser-known...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2023) 50 (1 (148)): 103–128.
Published: 01 February 2023
..., passage, wave actions are in the word schwellen , swell” ( AP , 494). Thresholds are not boundaries that seal in and prevent escape; instead, they are swells or innervated points of passage that open up and allow spillage. They are zones of indetermination wherein one can awaken to passages between...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 67–82.
Published: 01 August 2014
... of vernacular modernism raise a problem basic to the interrelation of critical theory and mass culture: how to bring a set of wide-ranging and highly abstract theoretical models—for example, collective innervation; play and second technology; image and body space; counterpublic spheres; aura...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 14–16.
Published: 01 August 2014
... account of the concept of innervation is important here.) Nevertheless, perhaps this is less a fractured subject than a condition more precisely characterized as a dis-integrative self—a subject incapable of being wholly identical to itself or of fully containing itself within a conscious- ness...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 145–157.
Published: 01 August 2014
... of technology.”6 The goal remains, as it were, the remaking of civilization—but a goal imagined, now, not through education but through innervation. Benjamin may share Peabody’s conceptual cathexis on the child at play, but to imagine achieving the aesthetico-political goal, he must recon- ceptualize...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 159–169.
Published: 01 August 2014
... of distraction and what he called “the collective innervation of tech- nology,” which involved spectators on a psychosomatic level. Compared with the later apparatus theoreticians, who one-sidedly damned the ideological effects of classical cinema, Benjamin, Hansen writes, “sees the cinematic crossing...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2008) 35 (2 (104)): 55–69.
Published: 01 August 2008
..., to its immanent formal law, the compulsion of its structure, will fi nd that objections to the merely subjective quality of his experience vanish like a pitiful illusion: and every step that he takes, by virtue of his highly subjective innervation, towards the heart...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2023) 50 (1 (148)): 83–102.
Published: 01 February 2023
... body and image space so interpenetrate that all revolutionary tension becomes bodily collective innervation, and all the bodily innervations of the collective become revolutionary discharge, has reality transcended itself to the extent demanded by the Communist Manifesto ” ( SW , 2:217–18). It may...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2010) 37 (3 (111)): 149–171.
Published: 01 November 2010
... “innervated” (innerviet) him. While heeding the pitfalls of overanalysis, it would appear as though Blumenberg’s use of a physiological term to describe the impact of Schmitt’s critique was intended to set it apart from the other responses to his book, as there was indeed some- thing in Schmitt’s words...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 20–28.
Published: 01 August 2014
... understanding, the importance of speaking of horrible innervation or sensory experience as it relates to not just the female subject but the possibilities offered by this medium, and how this medium really imagines forms of connection with the world. ...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 35–45.
Published: 01 August 2014
... leader, and then buttressed the clout of pri- vate property. The proliferation and distribution of the technologically repro- duced image allows the democratization of what Hansen calls innervation, an experience rather than a thing.13 The communally shared experience of cinema images (since...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2014) 41 (2 (122)): 47–65.
Published: 01 August 2014
... of oversmoothing the uneasy pulse of the modern life steeped in traumatic experiences and innervations. It was an equivalent of her skepticism toward the Hollywood continuity machine that Miriam strained to read in the minds of Russian avant-garde filmmakers of the 1920s. If she succeeded, then she did so...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2020) 47 (1 (139)): 81–103.
Published: 01 February 2020
... metaphor for contemporary urban life. 9 Part of what makes Moholy-Nagy a useful comparison for Kluge is that Moholy-Nagy also theorized the city symphony. As Patrizia McBride has argued, Moholy-Nagy’s concept of a new vision, or rather his concept of a “vision in motion,” aimed at “innervating...
FIGURES
Journal Article
New German Critique (2006) 33 (1 (97)): 159–178.
Published: 01 February 2006
... Selbst.” 14. DoE, 247; DdA, 285. “In einen Tierleib gebannt zu sein, gilt als Verdammnis.” Translation modified. 15. NDe, 365; ND, 357–58. “Die Innervation, Metaphysik möchte gewinnen allein, wenn sie sich wegwirft.” Translation modified. 16. NDe, 406; ND, 398. “Aus ihm von innen her...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2009) 36 (3 (108)): 85–108.
Published: 01 November 2009
... of intellectual experience, thus combin- ing experience and intellect in such a way that spiritual experiences can always also be turned back again onto intellectual experiences, so that something new can emerge: “Knowledge comes to us through a network of prejudices, opinions, innervations, self...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2018) 45 (1 (133)): 1–22.
Published: 01 February 2018
... own bodily move- ments and innervations. Benjamin notes the corporeal lightness that comes with losing and the heaviness of winning. For this reason, there is some para- doxical relief in losing, in being released from the gaming table, in escape from the dialectic of freedom and fate...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2013) 40 (1 (118)): 93–117.
Published: 01 February 2013
... standardizing of consciousness, deindividualization, the production of petrified sameness. “The person seized by panic is capable of innervating the dark basis of the collective identification—the false con- sciousness of individuals who, without transparent solidarity and blindly sub- jected to images...