Accéder au contenu Accéder au menu principal Accéder à la recherche
Accéder au contenu Accéder au menu principal
UQAM logo
Page d'accueil de l'UQAM Étudier à l'UQAM Bottin du personnel Carte du campus Bibliothèques Pour nous joindre

Service des bibliothèques

Portail BiblioFEM*
UQAM logo
Portail BiblioFEM*
  • Bibliographie
  • Accueil
  1. Vitrine des bibliographies
  2. Portail BiblioFEM*
  3. Touching, unbelonging, and the absence of affect
  • À propos
Bibliographie complète

Touching, unbelonging, and the absence of affect

RIS

Format recommandé pour la plupart des logiciels de gestion de références bibliographiques

BibTeX

Format recommandé pour les logiciels spécialement conçus pour BibTeX

Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
  • Khanna, Ranjana (Auteur)
Titre
Touching, unbelonging, and the absence of affect
Résumé
This article argues that psychoanalytic notions of affect – including ideas of anxiety and melancholia, as well as deconstructive concepts of auto-affection – offer a feminist ethico-politics and a notion of affect as interface. Beyond the confines of the experiential and the positivist, both psychoanalysis and deconstruction provide insights into affect as a technology that understands the subject as porous. I consider works by Derek Jarman and Shirin Neshat to demonstrate the importance of the ethico-politics of affect as interface in contemporary cultural production. Both artists, in the process of considering the spectacular nature of notions of feminist and queer, use images of interface as a way of delimiting the spectacular nature of being and demonstrating the singularity of the event, the desire to fix through framing, and the parergonal nature of framing. The presence of the subject is questioned even as an auto-affection is suggestive of a spectral demand of the ethico-political. In the case of Jarman’s Blue, the denial of image as face in favour of the screen as interface is interrupted by sound and voice, which gesture toward representation as impossible but necessary. In the case of Neshat, the persistence of the photographic – the highly aesthetic self-portrait as mugshot – foregrounds face as interface, as one that questions presence through the insistence of a representational apparatus.
Publication
Feminist Theory
Volume
13
Numéro
2
Pages
213-232
Date
2012
Abrév. de revue
Feminist Theory
Langue
Anglais
DOI
10.1177/1464700112442649
ISSN
1464-7001
URL
https://uqam-bib.on.worldcat.org/oclc/5723941518
Consulté le
05/06/2019 19:17
Extra
https://philpapers.org/rec/KHATUA
Référence
Khanna, Ranjana. (2012). Touching, unbelonging, and the absence of affect. Feminist Theory, 13(2), 213‑232. https://doi.org/10.1177/1464700112442649
Approches et analyses
  • Queer
Discipline
  • Arts
    • Arts visuels et médiatiques
  • Sciences
    • Psychanalyse
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/bibliofem/bibliographie/25J862X7

UQAM - Université du Québec à Montréal

  • Portail BiblioFEM*
  • bibliotheques@uqam.ca

Accessibilité Web