[D-G] Hello everyone!
Julia Barclay
julia at flyingoutofsequence.org
Wed Feb 1 02:41:59 PST 2006
Lyotard wrote some kind of post modern fairy tale...can't remember the name
off the top of my head but someone on the list will surely know.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bruno" <brunolistopad at hotmail.com>
To: <deleuze-guattari at lists.driftline.org>
Sent: Wednesday, February 01, 2006 12:35 AM
Subject: Re: [D-G] Hello everyone!
> Hello everyone
>
> Perhaps somehow out of the context; I am looking for some information
> regarding Fairy Tale(s) made by Deleuze and Guattari, or other authors
> which
> are somehow related in a way.
> If someone knows something material published, I would be grateful for
> the
> information...
>
> All the Best!
>
> Bruno
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "NZ" <pretzelworld at gmail.com>
> To: <deleuze-guattari at lists.driftline.org>
> Sent: Friday, January 27, 2006 7:16 AM
> Subject: Re: [D-G] Hello everyone!
>
>
> > all im trying to say is that the internet provides a fine place for
> > the list and I just wanted to support Rita's (hello!) efforts in
> > making ths internet list a more "published" work! the cab-driver would
> > b e a fantastic editor cuz the cabbie has such a funny personality, i
> > like it a lot! (please take me whereever you want to go mister
> > taxi-driver!) but if you cant decide perhaps the internet is a good
> > place to allow multiple stories to intersect, I like wikipedia b/c the
> > connectyion link like a narrative building list (personally I think
> > EVERYTHING on the internet is a linear list, even a google search is
> > not non-linear, it comes to you as a list, it is all linear really
> > even the URL, I imagine this deleuze list growing like strings,
> > perhaps Linkletter's entry from 1998 could be appended by SpikeLeeJr
> > in 2007, but I guess you'd want to link those strings together in some
> > readable way, or perhaps it would be nice to tangle them inside the
> > cab-driver's belly like spagetti?)
> >
> > its good to celebrate with beer, the sumerian new years (of 36
> > centuries ago) is a historic event in the history of civilization.
> > After "the flood", when the governing family structure (oedipal or
> > otherwise, just read deleuze on the "barbarian societies") got
> > replaced by the "state" structure, thanks to that jerk nimrod and his
> > crony priests who also began to codify the biblical canon as well as
> > create a structureal economic latice (which began our modern
> > geopolitics) aaannnnddd.......... and what is also quite neat is that
> > at the same time (er, within a couple centuries) the written "picto"
> > language began to deal with homonyms and synomynms as "literal"
> > graphic representations and such things that the schizophrenic psyche
> > feed off..... all of theses things go hand-in-hand, growing up to
> > today! especially money!
> >
> > those darn deluvian priests and their deluded poetics of astronomy
> > (not science, poetics!) with their depressed paranoid psychology who
> > looked away up into the stars and could find the same constellations
> > that existed in their neulogical pathways, like a mirror of the mind,
> > and what they saw was a spiralling spiral spiral of destuction. There
> > is something incredible about the fact that the narative is not built
> > from things that exist in the world, but merely the geometrics of
> > stars and planets, somehow this makes more of a correspondense with
> > the neuoloical constellations of our imagination.
> >
> > but they only saw a spiralling dragon who will eat up all the flock in
> > some kind of paranooid apocolysce - by gosh did they have some
> > personal problems that needed to be worked out! at least the earth's
> > axis has changed significantly since 3600 bc(!) so now that dragon is
> > no longer spiraling around the "absolute north" point, just off to the
> > side a little, and I gues thatts good for now.
> >
> > As for spelling, I hate spelling, leave the way it is, its organic at
> > least, if people want to express themselps in a particular way they
> > then they ought to make the effort to tighty up themselves (ie
> > submissions work fine for most normal publications, but it seems like
> > we all want to avoid that submission process, I feel that way anyway
> > thank you)
> > _______________________________________________
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> >
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