In his terrifying essay-cum-horror-story on the then nascent logic of ‘control’, Gilles Deleuze warned of a power that writhes and flexes like the ‘coils of a serpent’. Speculating on the transformative implications of the digital, he told of an ontological power, an adaptable power performed in complex systems of mediated communication, a power no longer restricted by the space-time of modern institutions. In this story, a monstrous control operates in the form of computational stimuli, functioning socially and biologically, infiltrating bodily relations so as to cultivate an addiction to its influence. The aim of such a power is not to fix or restrict radical energies but to manage or generate such processes by massaging relational potent...
This book argues that dominant psychoanalytic approaches to horror films neglect the aesthetics of h...
In this article, I seek to discuss the principles of modulation and variation in Deleuze’s canonical...
In his short paper “Postscript on Control Societies” (Deleuze 1995: 177-82), Gilles Deleuze offered ...
After languishing for many years in the periphery of the field as a tacitly closed off concept, visu...
This thesis explores how digital visual effects (DVFx) influence not only public appreciation of dig...
In this article, I argue that the new - as opposed to habitualised - optical and digital technologie...
Deleuze’s short essay on the societies of control has, one could say, infected thought on the presen...
Deleuze's seminal work 'The Image of Thought' addresses the impact of technological reproducibility ...
This article begins by reflecting on what Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari define as aesthetic nom...
The use of computer-generated imagery is becoming increasingly ubiquitous across many fields includi...
This visual essay will appropriate the style of Marxist art historian John Berger’s seminal Ways of ...
Through recourse to Gilles Deleuze’s short polemical essay ‘Postscript on Control Societies’ and the...
As we shape them, our tools have the power to shape us too. By using digital instruments that enhanc...
This article explores the role of images in the workings of contemporary power. It examines one of t...
"2004".Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Society, Culture, Media & Philosophy, Departm...
This book argues that dominant psychoanalytic approaches to horror films neglect the aesthetics of h...
In this article, I seek to discuss the principles of modulation and variation in Deleuze’s canonical...
In his short paper “Postscript on Control Societies” (Deleuze 1995: 177-82), Gilles Deleuze offered ...
After languishing for many years in the periphery of the field as a tacitly closed off concept, visu...
This thesis explores how digital visual effects (DVFx) influence not only public appreciation of dig...
In this article, I argue that the new - as opposed to habitualised - optical and digital technologie...
Deleuze’s short essay on the societies of control has, one could say, infected thought on the presen...
Deleuze's seminal work 'The Image of Thought' addresses the impact of technological reproducibility ...
This article begins by reflecting on what Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari define as aesthetic nom...
The use of computer-generated imagery is becoming increasingly ubiquitous across many fields includi...
This visual essay will appropriate the style of Marxist art historian John Berger’s seminal Ways of ...
Through recourse to Gilles Deleuze’s short polemical essay ‘Postscript on Control Societies’ and the...
As we shape them, our tools have the power to shape us too. By using digital instruments that enhanc...
This article explores the role of images in the workings of contemporary power. It examines one of t...
"2004".Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Society, Culture, Media & Philosophy, Departm...
This book argues that dominant psychoanalytic approaches to horror films neglect the aesthetics of h...
In this article, I seek to discuss the principles of modulation and variation in Deleuze’s canonical...
In his short paper “Postscript on Control Societies” (Deleuze 1995: 177-82), Gilles Deleuze offered ...