Gilles Deleuze : an apprenticeship in philosophy /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Hardt, Michael, 1960-
Imprint:Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, c1993.
Description:xxi, 139 p. ; 24 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/1464668
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ISBN:0816621608 (acid-free)
0816621616 (pbk. : acid-free)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: Hegel and the Foundations of Poststructuralism
  • Preliminary Remark: The Early Deleuze: Some Methodological Principles
  • Ch. 1. Bergsonian Ontology: The Positive Movement of Being. 1.1. Determination and Efficient Difference. 1.2. Multiplicity in the Passage from Quality to Quantity. 1.3. The Positive Emanation of Being. 1.4. The Being of Becoming and the Organization of the Actual. Remark: Deleuze and Interpretation
  • Ch. 2. Nietzschean Ethics: From Efficient Power to an Ethics of Affirmation. 2.1. The Paradox of Enemies. 2.2. The Transcendental Method and the Partial Critique. Remark: Deleuze's Selection of the "Impersonal" Nietzsche. 2.3. Slave Logic and Efficient Power. Remark: The Resurgence of Negativity. 2.4. Slave Labor and the Insurrectional Critique. Remark: The Will to Workers' Power and the Social Synthesis. 2.5. The Being of Becoming: The Ethical Synthesis of the Efficient Will. 2.6. The Total Critique as the Foundation of Being. Remark: The End of Deleuze's Anti-Hegelianism. 2.7. Pathos and Joy: Toward a Practice of Affirmative Being
  • Ch. 3. Spinozian Practice: Affirmation and Joy. Speculation. 3.1. Substance and the Real Distinction: Singularity. 3.2. Expressive Attributes and the Formal Distinction: Univocity. Remark: Ontological Speculation. 3.3. The Powers of Being. Ontological Expression. 3.4. The Interpretation of the Attributes: Problems of a Materialist Ontology. Remark: Speculative Production and Theoretical Practice. 3.5. Combatting the Privileges of Thought. Remark: From Forschung to Darstellung. Power. 3.6. The True and the Adequate. 3.7. What a Body Can Do. Practice. 3.8. Common Notions: The Assemblages of Composable Being. 3.9. The Constitution of Reason. Remark: Theoretical Practice and Practical Constitution. 3.10. The Art of Organization: Toward a Political Assemblage
  • Ch. 4. Conclusion: An Apprenticeship in Philosophy. 4.1. Ontology. 4.2. Affirmation. 4.3. Practice. 4.4. Constitution.