Practicing Deleuze and Guattari

Volume 6, Numbers 1-2


Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari use the concept of the rhizome to signify a type of thought that is capable of making connections between different systems of knowledge-formation. Rhizomatic thought would open the possibility of redrawing the lines between sometimes rigidly distinct areas of inquiry such as philosophy, literature, politics, and the arts. Rhizomatic thinking, as expressed in this challenging and unique set of essays, is always consonant with the announced aim of this journal: to encourage the intermingling of discourses and disciplines.

Contents

Daniel W. Conway
Tumbling Dice

Ricard Doyle
Corporeal Time Images

Elisabeth Grosz
Thinking the New

Alphonso Lingis
Bestiality

Allan Stoekl
Lanzmann and Deleuze

Jeffrey T. Nealon
Refraining, Becoming-Black

Steven Shaviro
Beauty Lies in the Eye

Theodore M. Norton
For a Nomadology of Forth

Charles E. Scott
Practices of Repetition

Jeff Karnicky
Keanu Rhizome

Megan Sweeney
True Crime Texts

Carsten Henrik Meiner
Deleuze and Style

Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Deleuze in the Age of Posttheory