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Statements and profiles

Statements and profiles ANGELAKI journal of the theoretical humanities volume 8 number 3 december 2003 introduction keith w. faulkner Deleuze wrote this essay in 1946 at the age of twenty-one. It is the direct continuation of his first essay, “Description of Woman.” In that previous essay Deleuze was attacking Sartre’s notion of love. This continuation starts where the first essay left off: “Impurity belongs to the dynamic of woman or, if one prefers, to a moral description.” This is the question that Deleuze takes up in “Statements and Profiles.” Impurity gilles deleuze and vice only have a place because there is a divi- sion between nature and culture. For Deleuze this is the caesura that opens up the possibility translated by keith w. faulkner of love. The question addressed in this essay is: what fascinates us about the Other? Sartre gave his answer when he interpreted STATEMENTS AND Proust as follows: “Through her consciousness Albertine escapes Marcel even when he is at her PROFILES side, and knows relief only when he gazes on her while she sleeps. It is certain then that the lover wishes to capture a ‘consciousness.’” Deleuze voluntary and empty. They reveal the solitary opposes this interpretation by Sartre http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities Taylor & Francis

Statements and profiles

10 pages

Statements and profiles

Abstract

ANGELAKI journal of the theoretical humanities volume 8 number 3 december 2003 introduction keith w. faulkner Deleuze wrote this essay in 1946 at the age of twenty-one. It is the direct continuation of his first essay, “Description of Woman.” In that previous essay Deleuze was attacking Sartre’s notion of love. This continuation starts where the first essay left off: “Impurity belongs to the dynamic of woman or, if one prefers, to a moral description.” This is...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1469-2899
eISSN
0969-725X
DOI
10.1080/0969725032000154403
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ANGELAKI journal of the theoretical humanities volume 8 number 3 december 2003 introduction keith w. faulkner Deleuze wrote this essay in 1946 at the age of twenty-one. It is the direct continuation of his first essay, “Description of Woman.” In that previous essay Deleuze was attacking Sartre’s notion of love. This continuation starts where the first essay left off: “Impurity belongs to the dynamic of woman or, if one prefers, to a moral description.” This is the question that Deleuze takes up in “Statements and Profiles.” Impurity gilles deleuze and vice only have a place because there is a divi- sion between nature and culture. For Deleuze this is the caesura that opens up the possibility translated by keith w. faulkner of love. The question addressed in this essay is: what fascinates us about the Other? Sartre gave his answer when he interpreted STATEMENTS AND Proust as follows: “Through her consciousness Albertine escapes Marcel even when he is at her PROFILES side, and knows relief only when he gazes on her while she sleeps. It is certain then that the lover wishes to capture a ‘consciousness.’” Deleuze voluntary and empty. They reveal the solitary opposes this interpretation by Sartre

Journal

Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical HumanitiesTaylor & Francis

Published: Dec 1, 2003

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