The School of Geographical Sciences at the University of Bristol is proud to host the 5th annual Bassett lecture on Thursday 29th January 2015.
This year’s speaker is Professor Marcus Doel from Swansea University, who will be presenting under the title, ‘Through a net darkly: spatial expression and schizoanalysis (subject to finance).’
The lecture will take place at 4pm on Thursday 29th January in the Peel Lecture Theatre, School of Geographical Sciences, University Road, Bristol, BS8 1SS
All Welcome!
Abstract:
In Anti-Oedipus, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari wrote that Louis Hjelmslev’s “concerted
destruction of the signifier” not only unleashed “a decoded theory of
language” that was perfectly attuned to both capitalist and schizophrenic
flows, but also that it was “the only modern—and not archaic—theory of
language.” Hjemslev was the blast of fresh air that blew Ferdinand de
Saussure and Jacques Lacan away, and ushered in a post-structuralist
schizoanalysis of world-historical libidinal flows. The encounter with
Hjelmslev proved pivotal for Guattari, the force of which reverberated
throughout all of his subsequent writings. Hjelmslev effectively
counter-signed the two volumes of Capitalism & Schizophrenia and Kafka that Guattari
wrote with Deleuze, as well as Guattari’s own Machinic
Unconscious, Schizoanalytic Cartographies, The Three Ecologies, and Chaosmosis. And
yet, “the Danish Spinozist geologist, Hjelmslev, that dark prince
descended from Hamlet,” was never the subject of sustained attention in
any of these texts. In this lecture I consider the import
of Hjelmslev for Guattari, with particular reference to the
spatiality of the structural unconscious and the machinic unconscious, and
use this as a basis to think through the bewildering cast of characters
that are ‘subject to finance’ and that increasingly plague our world, such
as Homo Economicus, Homo Debitor, Homo Faber, Homo
Subprimicus, and Financial Homo Sacer.
Biography:
Marcus Doel is Professor of Human Geography, in the College of Science at Swansea University. His research interests include poststructuralist geography, post-Marxist geography & deconstructive geography, modern and postmodern consumer culture, financialization of everyday life, film, visual culture & the optical unconscious. Recent books include Jean Baudrillard: Fatal Theories (Co-edited, Routledge, 2009), Moving Pictures/Stopping Places: Hotels and Motels on Film (Co-edited, Lexington, 2009), and Killing Space, Killing Time: Still • Dead • Certain (Forthcoming).
Bassett Lecture:
The Bassett Lecture is held every year in honour of Dr. Keith Bassett, a critical geographer and long-time Senior Lecturer in the School of Geographical Sciences. Although formally retired, Dr. Bassett continues to write, teach, and contribute to the intellectual life of the School and University. The lecture series recognizes Dr. Bassett's work and contributions in the fields of social and geographical theory, critical geographies of political economy, urbanism, social movements and social justice, political ecology, and critical socio-legal studies.
Please circulate widely.