You can listen to this audiobook in formats: FLAC, AAC, MPEG4, MP3, WAV, WMA (compression RAR, ZIP, CPIO, BZ, TZO, TBZ2)
Total pages original book: 264
Includes a PDF summary of 27 pages
Duration of the summary (audio): 20M41S (5.4 MB)
Description or summary of the audiobook: Gilles Deleuze is considered one of the most important French philosophers of the twentieth century. Eleanor Kaufman situates Deleuze in relation to others of his generation, such as Jean-Paul Sartre, Pierre Klossowski, Maurice Blanchot, and Claude Levi-Strauss, and she engages the provocative readings of Deleuze by Alain Badiou and Slavoj Zizek.Deleuze, The Dark Precursor is organized around three themes that critically overlap: dialectic, structure, and being. Kaufman argues that Deleuze's work is deeply concerned with these concepts, even when he advocates for the seemingly opposite notions of univocity, nonsense, and becoming. By drawing on scholastic thought and reading somewhat against the grain, Kaufman suggests that these often-maligned themes allow for a nuanced, even positive reflection on apparently negative states of being, such as extreme inertia. This attention to the negative or minor category has implications that extend beyond philosophy and into feminist theory, film, American studies, anthropology, and architecture.
Other categories, genre or collection: Philosophy, Literary Theory, Western Philosophy, From C 1900 -, History Of Western Philosophy