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El. knyga: Invention of a People: Heidegger and Deleuze on Art and the Political

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A multi-layered reading of the intersections between two of the most influential figures in contemporary philosophy

The Invention of a People explores the residual relation between Heidegger's thought and Deleuze's novelty, focusing on the parallels between their emphasis on the connection of earth, art and a people-to-come.

Contextualising the problematic of a people-to-come within a larger political and philosophical context of post-war thinkers of community such as Bataille, Blanchot and Nancy, Sholtz offers a creative approach to the work of these two thinkers. Deleuze's project is therefore cast as both an extension and radicalisation of the Heideggerian themes of immanence, ontological difference and the transformative potential of art.

Presenting interstitial readings of Paul Klee, Kostos Axelos, Arthur Rimbaud, the 1960's art collective Fluxus and artist Brian Fridge, she invents creative encounters which act as provocations from the outside, opening new lines of flight and previously unthought terrain. Ultimately, she develops a diagrammatic image of a people-to-come that is constantly in flux and can answer the demands of the untimely future.
Acknowledgments vi
Abbreviations vii
Introduction: The People Are Missing 1(24)
PART I DIVERGENCE, THE POINT OF NIETZSCHE
1 Heidegger's Nietzsche
25(22)
2 Deleuze's Nietzsche
47(26)
PART II (UN)THINKING, WHAT MUST BE THOUGHT Introduction to Part II
73(118)
3 Heidegger on Art and Ontology
Klee Plateau: The (Deferred) Possibility of (Art's) Other Beginning
83(42)
4 Deleuze on Art and Ontology
Axelos Plateau: From Earth to the Cosmic
125(66)
PART III (UN)EARTHING A PEOPLE-TO-COME
Introduction to Part III
191(3)
5 Heidegger and the Political
Rimbaud Plateau: Car il arrive a l'inconnu?
194(41)
6 Deleuze and the Political
Fridge Plateau: Being True to the Earth, or Cosmic Artisantry
235(30)
CONCLUDING EVENT
Fluxus Plateau: Ontology to Fluxology
265(18)
Index 283
Janae Sholtz is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Alvernia University. She has published articles within PhiloSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism. She has contributed chapters to The Continuum Companion to Heidegger edited by Francois Raffoul and Eric S. Nelson (Bloomsbury, 2013) and Between Deleuze and Foucault edited by Daniel W. Smith, Thomas Nail and Nicolae Morar (Edinburgh University Press, forthcoming). Dr. Sholtz researches primarily in 20th-century and contemporary continental philosophy. Her current research is focused on the work of Deleuze and Guattari and their interlocutors, and includes subjects of dramatisation, the nature of the event, transgression, immanence, powers of affect and the conjunction of the aesthetic and the political.