توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Lived Temporalities: Exploring Duration in Guatemala. Empirical and Theoretical Studies
نام کتاب : Lived Temporalities: Exploring Duration in Guatemala. Empirical and Theoretical Studies
ویرایش : 1. Aufl.
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : زمان زندگی: کاوش در مدت زمان در گواتمالا. مطالعات تجربی و نظری
سری : Cultural Studies; 26
نویسندگان : Julia Mahler
ناشر : transcript Verlag
سال نشر : 2015
تعداد صفحات : 282
ISBN (شابک) : 9783839406571
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Contents\nAcknowledgements\nPreface: Inhabiting the Event\nAbstract\n1. Lived Temporalities in Guatemala\n 1.1 Lived Temporalities in the Mayan Cosmovision of Time\n 1.2 The Concept of ‘Lived Time’ in Deleuze’s Reading of Bergson\n 1.2.1 Duration: Lived Time as Virtual Multiplicity\n 1.2.2 The Condition of Duration: Ontology\n 1.2.3 The Movement within Duration: Life\n 1.2.4 Knowledge through Duration: Intuition\n 1.2.5 Living Life Impelled by Duration: Vitalism\n 1.3 The Location of the Research: Guatemala\n 1.4 Methodology: Studying Atmospheres of Duration and their Production\n 1.4.1 Affirming an Atmosphere: The Molar and the Molecular\n 1.4.2 Mapping an Atmosphere: The Partial Objects\n 1.4.3 Analysing an Atmosphere: The Machine\n 1.5 Locating the Research Project within Existing Research\n2. ‘Poco a Poco’: Passive Time and the Traditional Home\n 2.1 Introduction: Passive Time and the Living Present\n 2.1.1 Passive Time\n 2.1.2 The Living Present\n 2.1.3 Tradition\n 2.2 Empirical Explorations\n 2.2.1 Temporalities of Fire\n 2.2.2 Temporalities of Water\n 2.2.3 Temporalities of Sweetcorn\n 2.2.4 Temporalities of Saints\n 2.3 Conclusion and Line of Flight\n3. ‘Todo Sirve’: The Passive Self and the Guatemalan Market\n 3.1 Introduction: Immanence and Territorialisation\n 3.2 Empirical Explorations\n 3.2.1 The Market as a Plane of Immanence\n 3.2.2 The Passive Self: Territorialisation through Resonance\n 3.2.3 Territorialisation and Consistency\n 3.3 Conclusion and Line of Flight\n4. ‘Mañana’: Becoming-Active and the Unpleasant\n 4.1 Introduction: The passive Encounter with the Unpleasant and the Affirmation of Life\n 4.1.1 The Affect: Unpleasure as reactive Force\n 4.1.2 Differenciation: Unpleasure as active Force\n 4.1.3 Binding: The active Forgetting of Unpleasure\n 4.2 Empirical Explorations\n 4.2.1 The Affect: Unpleasure as reactive Force\n 4.2.2 Differenciation: Unpleasure as active Force\n 4.2.3 Binding: The active Forgetting of Unpleasure\n 4.3 Conclusion and Line of Flight\n5. ‘Gracias a Dios’: The Event and Guatemalan Buses\n 5.1 Introduction: Making Sense of the Other and the double Reading of Time\n 5.1.1 The Event and the Notion of the ‘Other’\n 5.1.2 Chronos: The Time of the Actual Other\n 5.1.3 Aion: The Time of the Event\n 5.1.4 The Event as Virtual Balance between Self and Other\n 5.2 Empirical Explorations\n 5.3 Conclusion and Line of Flight\n6. Research Findings: Lived Temporalities and the Recognition of the Actual Other\n 6.1 Lived Temporalities: Time as Virtual Multiplicity\n 6.2 The Recognition of the Actual Other\n 6.2.1 The Desire for Omnipotence and the Desire for Mutual Recognition\n 6.2.2 The Desire for Mutual Recognition and the Desire for a Holding Space\n 6.2.3 The Desire for a Holding Space and Becoming-Active\n 6.2.4 Becoming-Active and the Circumvention of Becoming-Reactive\n 6.2.5 The Circumvention of Becoming-Reactive and Responsibility\n 6.3 Conclusion\nBibliography\nAppendix\n I. Map of Guatemala\n II. Questionnaire\n III. Photo Examples