Entanglements, or transmedial thinking about capture

著者

    • Chow, Rey

書誌事項

Entanglements, or transmedial thinking about capture

Rey Chow

(A John Hope Franklin Center book)

Duke University Press, 2012

  • : pbk. : alk. paper

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index. media studies, philosophy, psychology, social theory, art theory

内容説明・目次

内容説明

How might the pornographic be associated with Brecht's and Benjamin's media theories? How are Foucault's and Deleuze's writings on visibilities "postcolonial"? What happens when Ranciere's discussions of art are juxtaposed with cultural anthropology? What does a story by Lao She about collecting reveal about political collectivism in modern China? How does Girard's notion of mimetic violence speak to identity politics? How might Arendt's and Derrida's reflections on forgiveness be supplemented by a film by Lee Chang-dong? What can Akira Kurosawa's films about Japan say about American Studies? How is Asia framed transnationally, with what consequences for those who self-identify as Asian? These questions are dispersively heterologous yet mutually implicated. This paradoxical character of their discursive relations is what Rey Chow intends with the word "entanglements," by which she means, first, an enmeshment of topics: the mediatized image in modernist reflexivity; captivation and identification; victimhood; the place of East Asia in globalized Western academic study. Beyond enmeshment, she asks, can entanglements be phenomena that are not defined by affinity or proximity? Might entanglements be about partition and disparity rather than about conjunction and similarity? Across medial forms (including theater, film, narrative, digitization, and photographic art), and against more popular trends of declaring things and people to be in flux, Chow proposes conceptual frames that foreground instead aesthetic, ontological, and sentient experiences of force, dominance, submission, fidelity, antagonism, masochism, letting-go, and the attraction to self-annihilation. Boundary, trap, capture, captivation, sacrifice, and mimesis: these riveting terms serve as analytic pressure points in her readings, articulating perversity, madness, and terror to pursuits of freedom.

目次

Note on Translations vi Acknowledgments vii Introduction 1 1. When Reflexivity Becomes Porn: Mutations of a Modernist Theoretical Practice 13 2. On Captivation: A Remainder of the "Indistinction of Art and Nonart" (written with Julian Rohrhuber) 31 3. Fateful Attachments: On Collecting, Fidelity, and Lao She 59 4. Sacrifice, Mimesis, and the Theorizing of Victimhood 81 5. "I insist on the Christian dimension": On Foregiveness . . . and the Outside of the Human 107 6. American Studies in Japan, Japan in American Studies: Challenges of the Heterolingual Address 133 7. Postcolonial Visibilities: Questions Inspired by Deleuze's Method 151 8. Framing the Original: Toward a New Visibility of the Orient 169 Postscript. Intimations from a Scene of Capture 183 Index 187

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