gary hall on Thu, 15 Sep 2005 11:34:53 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime-ann> [pub] Culture Machine: Online porn; Badiou; Auge |
Culture Machine <http://www.culturemachine.net> is pleased to announce the following new publications: CULTURE MACHINE INTERZONE * Dougal Phillips, ?Can Desire Go on Without a Body? Pornographic Exchange and the Death of the Sun?. http://culturemachine.tees.ac.uk/InterZone/dphillips.html Every day there are 68 million search engine requests for pornographic material, making up no less than a quarter of all searches. Porn websites account for as much as a quarter of all websites online. In this article Dougal Phillips considers the structural operation of the economy of desire found in online pornography, in particular the resonances it has with questions of the future of human technology and of the relationship between thought, desire and the body. Closely engaging with the work of Jean-François Lyotard, Phillips addresses two pressing issues: first, how we view the relation between technology and the body; and second, how a rethinking of the economies of the pornographic makes problematic the current theorisation of desire and of pornography. CULTURE MACHINE REVIEWS * Matthew Wilkens (ed.) (2005) ?The Philosophy of Alain Badiou?, special issue of Polygraph 17. Reviewed by Benjamin Noys. http://culturemachine.tees.ac.uk/Reviews/rev51.htm In his book on Deleuze Alain Badiou notes, with obvious approval, that Deleuze ?felt only contempt for debates?, preferring instead ?disputatio? ? dispute. It is only fitting then that Badiou?s work has generated so much dispute and so much antagonism. True to his own Maoist roots Badiou does not seek to settle safely within the regulated spaces of academic debate. The centrality of being (ontology), the event, the subject, and truths are what serve to divide Badiou?s ultra-modernist philosophy from all the main currents of both Continental and analytic philosophy. For Anglophone readers the resulting disputes have been traced in a number of recent collections devoted to Badiou?s work. Benjamin Noys considers a recent contribution to this ?Badiou wave?, the special issue of the journal Polygraph edited by Matthew Wilkens, which comes with an impressive list of contributors. * Marc Augé (2004) Oblivion. Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press. Reviewed by Les Roberts. http://culturemachine.tees.ac.uk/Reviews/rev50.htm For Les Roberts, Augé?s dialectic of memory and forgetting, as outlined in his recent book, Oblivion, may be looked upon as a ?mapping? of temporal lacunae and discontinuities. Roberts? use of a geographical metaphor is intended on the one hand to bring to the fore some of the spatial implications of Augé?s thesis ? and in this regard comparisons with Augé?s earlier work on non-places (1995), or his more recent Le temps en ruines (2003) prove instructive. One the other, this metaphor is aimed at countering the (a)spatial essentialism of the Bergsonian durée, in which space is subordinated to a temporal logic of flow and continuity, an instrumental logic that informs the radical deterritorialisations of the ?rhizome? and ?nomad?. CULTURE MACHINE <http://www.culturemachine.net> publishes new work from both established figures and up-and-coming writers. It is fully refereed and has an International Editorial Advisory Board which includes Geoffrey Bennington, Robert Bernasconi, Sue Golding, Lawrence Grossberg, Peggy Kamuf, Alphonso Lingis, Meaghan Morris, Paul Patton, Mark Poster, Avital Ronell, Nicholas Royle, Tadeusz Slawek and Kenneth Surin. -- Dr Gary Hall Senior Lecturer in Media and Cultural Studies, Middlesex University http://www.mdx.ac.uk/subjects/mcc/mcs/index.htm Co-editor of Culture Machine http://www.culturemachine.net My website http://www.garyhall.info _______________________________________________ nettime-ann mailing list nettime-ann@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ann