This short essay reads diffractively key texts by British novelist and writer Virginia Woolf (1882–1941) and French psychotherapist and philosopher Félix Guattari (1930–1992). The diffractive reading methodology was first proposed by Donna Haraway and Karen Barad. Experimenting with the methodology in single- and coauthored pieces, I have further developed diffractive reading for the immanent epistemology of new materialism. This essay demonstrates through a diffractive reading practice how incorporation and externality, as well as ecology and entanglement, play important roles in a new materialist epistemology
*Modernist Physics* takes as its focus the ideas associated with three scientific papers published b...
Grisot G, Conklin K, Sotirova V. Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Readers’ responses to experimental ...
The article focuses on Virginia Woolf’s novel, The Waves, a sui generis work, in which the writer ex...
This short essay reads diffractively key texts by British novelist and writer Virginia Woolf (1882–1...
This short essay presents a critical cartography of the critical new materialist notion and methodol...
The Baradian optical metaphor of diffraction grounds a methodology at the core of Feminist new mater...
Diffraction,as conventionally defined, is a term for one among a number of wave phenomena.Since the ...
This article uses an actual scholarly encounter in order to work out the feminist methodological str...
One of the ways to understand literary modernism is to see it as a response to the crisis of Western...
This essay looks at subjectivity in Virginia Woolf’s The Waves employing a psychoanalytic approach a...
Quantum leaps happen in texts, too. This reading of the role of the quantum leap in Karen Barad's ...
Quantum leaps happen in texts, too. This reading of the role of the quantum leap in Karen Barad’s ag...
Taking up Haraway’s (1997, 2016) and Barad’s (2007) diffraction I, co-constituted with theory, parti...
The purpose of the study is to examine how visual art and literature can emerge without enclosed bou...
*Modernist Physics* takes as its focus the ideas associated with three scientific papers published b...
Grisot G, Conklin K, Sotirova V. Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Readers’ responses to experimental ...
The article focuses on Virginia Woolf’s novel, The Waves, a sui generis work, in which the writer ex...
This short essay reads diffractively key texts by British novelist and writer Virginia Woolf (1882–1...
This short essay presents a critical cartography of the critical new materialist notion and methodol...
The Baradian optical metaphor of diffraction grounds a methodology at the core of Feminist new mater...
Diffraction,as conventionally defined, is a term for one among a number of wave phenomena.Since the ...
This article uses an actual scholarly encounter in order to work out the feminist methodological str...
One of the ways to understand literary modernism is to see it as a response to the crisis of Western...
This essay looks at subjectivity in Virginia Woolf’s The Waves employing a psychoanalytic approach a...
Quantum leaps happen in texts, too. This reading of the role of the quantum leap in Karen Barad's ...
Quantum leaps happen in texts, too. This reading of the role of the quantum leap in Karen Barad’s ag...
Taking up Haraway’s (1997, 2016) and Barad’s (2007) diffraction I, co-constituted with theory, parti...
The purpose of the study is to examine how visual art and literature can emerge without enclosed bou...
*Modernist Physics* takes as its focus the ideas associated with three scientific papers published b...
Grisot G, Conklin K, Sotirova V. Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Readers’ responses to experimental ...
The article focuses on Virginia Woolf’s novel, The Waves, a sui generis work, in which the writer ex...