This article has three parts. The first elaborates corporal individuation as a function of movement and rest in Spinoza. Drawing upon Deleuze’s commentaries, I describe the entirety of these corporal movements as an “existential choreography.” Yet, Deleuze and Spinoza don’t entirely agree about the nature of the body or its affectability. In the second part, I address this disagreement as an antinomy: according to the “Spinozist” law, an affect cannot affect the essence of what it affects; according to the “Deleuzian” law, affect must make the affected become other. In the third part, I look more closely at this Deleuzian notion of affective “becoming.” Insofar as becoming entails a total disembodiment of affect, I argue that, in order to b...