‘Create, She Said’: Deleuze and Feminism (on Dorothea Olkowski’s Gilles Deleuze and the Ruin of Representation)
Rabaté & Lambert - Conversation on The Future of Theory - JCRT 4.2
Conversation on The Future of Theory\
Jean-Michel Rabaté
University of Pennsylvania
Gregg Lambert
Syracuse University
T_his public conversation was recorded at an event held at The Slought Gallery, Philadelphia, November 1st 2002, as part of a series called "Conversations in Theory," organized by Aaron Levy, curator. (Approximately 80 mins. in length.) A streaming audio archive of this event is available_: Real Media Stream Windows Media Stream \ [Media Support ]
Notes
\ Jean Michel Rabaté, The Future of Theory (London: Blackwell, 2002). \ Presented through the generous cooperation of the Slought Foundation.
Jean-Michel Rabaté is currently Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Pennsylvania. He has published around 15 books on Beckett, Bernhard, Pound, Joyce, psychoanalysis and literary theory. Recent books include Jacques Lacan (Palgrave, 2001) plus a collection of essays, Lacan in America (Other Press, 2000). He has just published James Joyce and the Politics of Egoism (Cambridge University Press, 2001) and The Future of Theory (Blackwell, 2002). Forthcoming is the Cambridge Guide to Jacques Lacan (Cambridge University Press, 2002). He is on the curatorial board of Slought Networks.
Gregg Lambert, Professor of English & Textual Studies, Syracuse University, has written and published on the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, contemporary literary theory, aesthetics, and the fate of the Humanities' disciplines in the contemporary university. Publications include The Non-Philosophy of Gilles Deleuze (Continuum, 2002) and Report to the Academy (Critical Studies in the Humanities, Davies 2001). Forthcoming in 2003 from Continuum is The Return of the Baroque: Art, History, and Theory in the Modern Age.
' 2003 Jean Michel Rabaté and Gregg Lambert. All rights reserved.
Updated 07/28/21.
http://jcrt.org/archives/04.2/rabate-lambert/
Discussion in the ATmosphere