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  • Introduction / Ian Buchanan  1
    Marxism and Dualism in Deleuze / Fredric Jameson  13
    The Memory of Resistance / D. N. Rodowick  37
    Deleuze and Materialism: One or Several Matters? / John Mullarkey  59
    Art and Territory / Ronald Bogue  85
    Deleuze and Cultural Studies / Ian Buchanan  103
    Immanence and Transcendence in the Genesis of Form / Manuel DeLanda  119
    Comment puet-on �e deleuzien? Pursuing a Two-Fold Thought / Charles J. Stivale  135
    Marx and Poststructuralist Philosophies of Difference / Eugene W. Holland  145
    Straining to Hear (Deleuze) / Tessa Dwyer  163
    Deleuze and the Body: Eluding Kafka's "Little Death Sentence" / Horst Ruthrof  183
    Deleuze and the Three Powers of Literature and Philosophy: To Demystify, to Experiment, to Create / Andr�ierre Colombat  199
    Overdetermined Oedipus: Mommy, Daddy, and Me as Desiring-Machine / Jerry Aline Flieger  219
    Deleuze's Philosophy of the Concrete / Jean-Clet Martin  241
    From Multiplicities to Folds: On Style and Form in Deleuze / Tom Conley  249
    Notes on Contributors  267
    Index  271
  • Fredric Jameson

    D. N. Rodowick

    John Mullarkey

    Ronald Bogue

    Ian Buchanan

    Manuel DeLanda

    Charles J. Stivale

    Eugene W. Holland

    Tessa Dwyer

    Horst Ruthrof

    André Pierre Colombat

    Jean-Clet Martin

    Tom Conley

  • “[W]ithin this collection there are a number of excellent examples of how to read alongside Deleuze in a non-dialectical fashion.”—Post-Structuralism and Radical Politics Newsletter

    Reviews

  • “[W]ithin this collection there are a number of excellent examples of how to read alongside Deleuze in a non-dialectical fashion.”—Post-Structuralism and Radical Politics Newsletter

  • “Here’s a remedy for resisting the anti-philosophy brigade. . . . [The contributors] energetically claim Deleuze’s importance for issues that have pressed us both politically and philosophically.”—Nina Zimnik, Film-Philosophy

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  • Description

    Michel Foucault’s suggestion that this century would become known as “Deleuzian” was considered by Gilles Deleuze himself to be a joke “meant to make people who like us laugh, and make everyone else livid.” Whether serious or not, Foucault’s prediction has had enough of an impact to raise concern about the potential “deification” of this enormously influential French philosopher. Seeking to counter such tendencies toward hagiography—not unknown, particularly since Deleuze’s death—Ian Buchanan has assembled a collection of essays that constitute a critical and focused engagement with Deleuze and his work.
    Originally published as a special issue of South Atlantic Quarterly (Summer 1997), this volume includes essays from some of the most prominent American, Australian, British, and French scholars and translators of Deleuze’s writing. These essays, ranging from film, television, art, and literature to philosophy, psychoanalysis, geology, and cultural studies, reflect the broad interests of Deleuze himself. Providing both an introduction and critique of Deleuze, this volume will engage those readers interested in literary and cultural theory, philosophy, and the future of those areas of study in which Deleuze worked.

    Contributors. Ronald Bogue, Ian Buchanan, André Pierre Colombat, Tom Conley, Manuel DeLanda, Tessa Dwyer, Jerry Aline Flieger, Eugene Holland, Fredric Jameson, Jean-Clet Martin, John Mullarkey, D. N. Rodowick, Horst Ruthrof, Charles J. Stivale

    About The Author(s)

    Ian Buchanan is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Tasmania.
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