[D-G] Books on Deleuze and Guattari after 2000

Charles J. Stivale ad4928 at wayne.edu
Sun Mar 13 12:17:36 PDT 2011


Dear all,
When I hear that something is "missing" from things Deleuze-Guattarian, such as a comprehensive and current bibliography, I start to itch (for lack of a better expression). Hence, the (currently) 31-page double-spaced bibliography that I have put together. Concern: would just posting that here as an attachment present any problems for downloading? I could place it on my web page (and will do so eventually), but I could not get to that until later in the week. Third option is just to send individual direct email attachments.
Let me know
CJ Stivale

----- Original Message -----
From: Prof. Jeffrey P. Cain <CainJ at sacredheart.edu>
To: deleuze-guattari at lists.driftline.org
Sent: Sat, 12 Mar 2011 19:14:26 -0500 (EST)
Subject: Re: [D-G] Books on Deleuze and Guattari after 2000

Prof. Stivale is one of the major authorities on D&G, and it's great news that he's re-doing the concepts book. which I have found useful and also recommended to my students. It's always worth a visit to his web pages. I'm glad too that he mentioned Gilles Deleuze: Image and Text--I just ordered my copy.  Thanks Charlie.

The Dosse book is really fascinating--it somewhat transgresses the line of viewing D&G as post-personal subjects and other ontological niceties, but I'm finding out quite a bit, especially about Guattari.  I knew, for example, that he was a communist, but I had no idea that he was such a purist, sticking to the Trotsky line right through a split with the French Communist Party.  Also the details of early days at La Borde, the influence of Oury, the various relationships, fractures, splits, and reconciliations do give you some tempting facts.  It's hard not to consider that some of the milieu--and I use the word in D&G's own sense(s)--affected their re-reading of Freud along political lines.  It's not the only reason Anti-Oedipus turned out as it did of course; there are obviously thousands of other singularities, potentials, discursive formations, transversal becomings, and so forth.  But it is something I hadn't thought about much before reading Dosse.  I'd be interested to 
 know how others feel.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jeffrey P. Cain, Ph.D.
Chair, Department of English HC221A
Sacred Heart University
Fairfield, Connecticut 06825
203.371.7810

"Philosophy's sole aim is to become worthy of the event. . . ."
                                                                      ----Gilles Deleuze & Felix Guattari, What is Philosophy? (1996)

Office Hours Spring 2011: Mondays 12:00-2:00; Wednesdays 12:00-2:00; Fridays 11:30-12:15
________________________________________
From: deleuze-guattari-bounces at lists.driftline.org [deleuze-guattari-bounces at lists.driftline.org] On Behalf Of Andrija F. [endymion23 at gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, March 12, 2011 3:53 PM
To: deleuze-guattari at lists.driftline.org
Subject: Re: [D-G] Books on Deleuze and Guattari after 2000

Thank you everybody. I sort of fell behind following new books on Deleuze
and Guattari (articles are different story, I've got most of them), but I
think I can get it sorted out now with those three books C. Stivale
mentioned.

Best,
a.
_______________________________________________
List address: deleuze-guattari at driftline.org
Info: http://lists.driftline.org/listinfo.cgi/deleuze-guattari-driftline.org
Archives: www.driftline.org
_______________________________________________
List address: deleuze-guattari at driftline.org
Info: http://lists.driftline.org/listinfo.cgi/deleuze-guattari-driftline.org
Archives: www.driftline.org




More information about the Deleuze-Guattari mailing list