Seminar 12
How can a subjet last
Friday, 21th Mai, 11am-2pm
Vhich are the temporal condition for a subject to appear? Is it identified with an evanescent moment of interruption or does it have a specific duration, built agains the present?IN order to answer this, Alain Badiou formulates a set of conditions under which we can think how a subject can last. We will approach these conditions by drawing upon specific artistic and political cases that Badiou analyses: the invention of serial music in the 20th century, and the political invention of the Paris Commune in 1871.
Seminar 11
The objective constitution of the collective subject
Friday, 16th April, 11am-2pm
Via Sartre’s Critique of Dialectical Reason we will analyze how on the one hand the objectivity of a situation is inseparable from the individual activities embedded in it, and how on the other hand a subjective change is possible only as collective moment that radically cuts with the individual freedoms, showing at the same time how these are the engine itself of the material necessities in which the subject is alienated.
Seminar 10
The proletariat as subject-object of history
Friday, 19th March, 11am-2pm
Via a close reading of György Lukács' History and Class Consciousness, we will analyze the idea of the standpoint of the proletariat as the point which enables both the knowability of the object of capitalism as a whole, and a direct qualitative upturning of this object: a dialectical synthesis of history where the knowledge of the object passes directly into the revolutionary transformation of human relations.
Seminar 9
Reason as an objective process
Friday, January 22nd, 11am-2pm
The third instance in our venture through the object-subject dialectic will pass through the works of Gaston Bachelard and Michel Foucault, and namely, through their attempts to ‘objectify’ the concept of reason. With these two pivotal figures of the French tradition of ‘historical epistemology’, what we in fact witness is a displacement of both the givenness of the category of the object and of the strict metaphysical centre of the subject.
Seminar 8
Freud and Nietzsche: Subject to Force
Friday 11 December, 11am-2pm
In this seminar Aaron Schuster will present an inquiry around the concept of ‘force’ in the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche and in the psychoanalytic theory of Sigmund Freud. His presentation will specifically focus on how for the two authors the subject arises as a reaction to a material, objective set of forces.
Seminar 7
Marx's gegenständliche Tätigkeit
Friday, 13 November 2009, 11am - 1pm
We will start the 2009-2010 season with a reading of Marx’s 1845 "Theses on Feuerbach". We will expore how Marx's postulation of the materialist primacy of the object rather than indicating a strict break with idealism, reincorporates some key elements of the idealist tradition, namely activity.
2008-2009 Seminar Summary
Excess and Subtraction (Seminars 1-6)
Seminar 6
Thought before and after the world
Friday, 15 May 2009, 11am - 2pm
In our sixth seminar, in order to combine the ontological perspectives of excess and subtraction, we will discuss two figures from the school of “speculative realism”, Quentin Meillassoux and Ray Brassier, and their attempt to refute the idea of finitude.
Seminar 5
Materialism of excess
Friday, 27 March 2009, 10am - 1pm
In our fifth meeting we will examine how the notion of excess unfolds in Alain Badiou, both from the perspective of the excess of a singularity over the situation to which it belongs, and from the point of view of the excess of a situation over its elements. Our aim is to explore together the complicated relation between these two aspects.
Seminar 4
Subtractive Object of Knowlege: Marx's Critique of Political Economy
Friday, 20 February 2009, 11am - 2pm
In the fourth seminar we examined Althusser's "symptomatic reading" of Marx's critique of political economy in order to reveal how subtraction is a key moment in the process of knowledge.
Seminar 3
Zero, Subject, Excess
Friday, 16 January 2009, 11am - 2pm
In our third inquiry into the concepts of excess and subtraction, we have invited Lorenzo Chiesa from the University of Kent to help us examine the complicated knotting between philosophy, mathematics and psychoanalys.
Seminar 2
From negation to excess: destruction, refusal, subtraction
Friday, 12 December 2008, 11am - 2pm
In the second seminar we will examine the themes of excess and subtraction at the specific points of encounter between philosophy and politics, points which enable us to see how concrete political events and sequences force philosophy to reshape its understanding of the moment of negativity.
Seminar 1
Art in excess and subtraction
November 2008, ICI Berlin
In this first seminar session we will focus on two texts that gravitate around cinema. Back to back we will use Alain Badiou's attempt to define cinema as the "plus-one" of the system of arts, and Gilles Deleuze's interest in subtraction and excess in Italian neo-realism.
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Zero, Subject, Excess.
In his seminal 1966 essay "La suture: elements de la logique du signifiant", Jacques-Alain Miller compares Frege's notion of the zero with Lacan's notion of the subject of the unconscious: the zero relates to the series of numbers in the same way as the subject relates to the signifying chain. For Frege, the zero is the support of the series of numbers precisely insofar as the zero as the lack of the object can be counted as one as number. Similarly, for Lacan, the subject of the unconscious should be understood as an excluded excess that sustains the signifying chain: the exclusion of the subject — which is thus barred — from the Other amounts to the repeated representation of such an exclusion in the Other by means of the unary trait. Most importantly, criticising Frege, Miller identifies the subject with the zero, and claims that the progression of natural whole numbers is itself made possible only by the repressed function of the subject. Formal logic misrecognises — or sutures — the formalism of the logic of the unconscious insofar as it does not — and cannot — take fully into account the fact that logic is always-already the signifier's logic, a logic generated by language as a symbolic intersubjective structure.
Lorenzo Chiesa is Lecturer in Critical Theory at the Italian Studies department of the University of Kent. He is the author of 'Subjectivity and Otherness: A Philosophical Reading of Lacan', published by MIT Press.
Readings:
Jacques Allain Miller, LA SUTURE
As complementary and background readings to Chiesa's paper, you can consult chapters 2,4 and 5 of Chiesa's book 'Subjectivity and Otherness: A Philosophical Reading of Lacan', MIT Press, 2007
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