• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Metaphor, Metamorphosis and Meaning: ‘All the Possibilities of Language’ inDifference and Repetition
  • Beteiligte: Cisney, Vernon W.
  • Erschienen: Edinburgh University Press, 2020
  • Erschienen in: Deleuze and Guattari Studies
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.3366/dlgs.2020.0391
  • ISSN: 2398-9777; 2398-9785
  • Schlagwörter: Literature and Literary Theory ; Philosophy
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  • Beschreibung: <jats:p>In this paper I explore two distinct but related emphases in Deleuze's later philosophy, both on his own and in collaboration with Félix Guattari, having to do with literature. The first is the emphasis on the work of literature as an assemblage whereby the author constructs lines of flight in the pursuit of self-experimentation and self-transformation. The second is the rejection of metaphor across Deleuze's work. I use Difference and Repetition to chart the origins of these emphases, by unpacking the metaphysics of language contained in Difference and Repetition. I first recount the basic structure of Deleuze's intensive ontology, before going on to discuss the way in which the ‘fundamental encounter’ forces thought to formulate Ideas, which, as they are transmitted through the subject, alter her nature. This self-transformation is tantamount to a kind of ‘death’, whereby one is continually explicated, but this explication implies the transcendental Other-structure at the end of Difference and Repetition, wherein the Other, through language, gives birth to ‘possible worlds’. I end with the development of an unexplored concept in Difference and Repetition, the loquendum, which is what must be spoken precisely because it is inexpressible, the purely intensive. Language comes closest to this intensive use in its aesthetic, poetic, literary modes whereby authors distort their own languages.</jats:p>