This article proposes that Deleuze’s psychoanalytically inspired theory of humour and irony provides an underappreciated way to theorize acts of resistance that adopt a structurally perverse position towards a law or authority. In his books Coldness and Cruelty and Difference and Repetition, Deleuze explains that the law is susceptible to two kinds of subversive procedure. The first, which he calls irony and which he aligns with sadism, reveals a gap between the law and its principles. The second, which he calls humour and which he aligns with masochism, exposes a gap between the law’s interdictions and their consequences. For Deleuze, humour and irony harbour the potential to overturn or overthrow the law. Drawing on Lacanian psychoanalyti...
The relationship between law and the thought of the French philosopher, Gilles Deleuze, is an intere...
In this chapter, I examine this phenomenon of the double bind by discussing the two contrasting lega...
peer reviewedThis article examines how Deleuze attempts to conceive the possibility of a non-hegelia...
In his 1967 work, Presentation of Sacher-Masoch – Coldness and Cruelty (2007), Gilles Deleuze ...
This article examines Gilles Deleuze’s and Giorgio Agamben’s thoughts on the immanent creativity eme...
Based on his reading of Sacher-Masoch’s Venus in Furs, Deleuze claims that one aspect of masochism i...
Chapter from Deleuze and Marx: Deleuze Studies, Volume 3 (Supplement), edited by Dhruv Jain. More ab...
This paper examines how Gilles Deleuze addresses, and fail to address, the darker strata in Nietzsch...
The article discusses the transition of the constitution of psycho-social authority towards mysticis...
Th e general idea of the article is to compare Deleuze’s theory of the institution, which emerges in...
Chapter from Deleuze and Politics, edited by Ian Buchanan and Nicholas Thoburn. More about this titl...
The multiple socio-political crises and the dominance of neoliberal and capitalist policies have led...
This paper is broadly concerned with Deleuze’s distinction between ‚la loi et les lois’ on the one h...
This article assesses the contemporary relevance of Sade’s work and thought by returning to Jacques ...
My article takes Robert Burt's piece as a starting point to highlight how a lacanian analysis of law...
The relationship between law and the thought of the French philosopher, Gilles Deleuze, is an intere...
In this chapter, I examine this phenomenon of the double bind by discussing the two contrasting lega...
peer reviewedThis article examines how Deleuze attempts to conceive the possibility of a non-hegelia...
In his 1967 work, Presentation of Sacher-Masoch – Coldness and Cruelty (2007), Gilles Deleuze ...
This article examines Gilles Deleuze’s and Giorgio Agamben’s thoughts on the immanent creativity eme...
Based on his reading of Sacher-Masoch’s Venus in Furs, Deleuze claims that one aspect of masochism i...
Chapter from Deleuze and Marx: Deleuze Studies, Volume 3 (Supplement), edited by Dhruv Jain. More ab...
This paper examines how Gilles Deleuze addresses, and fail to address, the darker strata in Nietzsch...
The article discusses the transition of the constitution of psycho-social authority towards mysticis...
Th e general idea of the article is to compare Deleuze’s theory of the institution, which emerges in...
Chapter from Deleuze and Politics, edited by Ian Buchanan and Nicholas Thoburn. More about this titl...
The multiple socio-political crises and the dominance of neoliberal and capitalist policies have led...
This paper is broadly concerned with Deleuze’s distinction between ‚la loi et les lois’ on the one h...
This article assesses the contemporary relevance of Sade’s work and thought by returning to Jacques ...
My article takes Robert Burt's piece as a starting point to highlight how a lacanian analysis of law...
The relationship between law and the thought of the French philosopher, Gilles Deleuze, is an intere...
In this chapter, I examine this phenomenon of the double bind by discussing the two contrasting lega...
peer reviewedThis article examines how Deleuze attempts to conceive the possibility of a non-hegelia...