Something that may be of interest to some of you – particularly those interested in engaging with feminist theory. The PoD are running a free seminar tomorrow night (Wednesday 20th April) at 6PM. For more details see the rest of this post:
Please join us for the final PoD seminar of our first seminar series, drinks to follow
PoD Seminar #6: “A Matter of Style: Fiction and Difference”
Abstract
In this paper I consider Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari’s conception of literary style as more than mere ornamentation in relation to Alexis Wright’s novel, The Swan Book (2013). Wright speaks of the “bad history” of Aboriginal life in the nation-state in her novel as well as in interviews and essays. Her aim is to “shape the rhythms that can be created in sentences” so as to “find out what makes a people,” especially those who “fall outside of life” (Wright, 2002). Her aim is no less political than literary. Wright’s pairing of life with writing chimes with the approach Deleuze and Guattari take toward literary works that engage with history through linguistic experimentation, and by that means find in history a reserve that can engender new possibilities in the future. I argue that Wright’s novel aligns with what Deleuze and Guattari call fabulation, a conception of fiction incorporating several dimensions and provokes a style necessarily collective and future-directed.
Bio
Linda Daley is a senior lecturer in literary and communication studies at RMIT University and a member of the Centre for Communication, Politics and Culture. She has published on the intersections of philosophy and literature and other cultural forms in various journals including Contemporary Women’s Writing; Feminist Theory; and Film-Philosophy.
WHEN:
6pm – 7:30pm, Wednesday 20th April 2016
WHERE:
Building 9, Room 9.3.4A
RMIT City Campus (cnr Bowen & Franklin)
*Free, no registration required*
ABOUT:
The Philosophies of
The first PoD seminar series will consist of weekly seminars beginning in March 2016. We especially welcome participation and contribution from women, people of colour, and other minority groups.
Philosophies of Difference is supported by the Communication Politics and Culture Research Centre at RMIT.
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