BECOMING ET AL Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Leicester by Arko Sen Management Centre University of Leicester 2005 UMI Number: U219241 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U219241 Published by ProQuest LLC 2013. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 ABSTRACT ‘BECOMING ET AL’ Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University Of Leicester. by Arko Sen Management Centre University of Leicester The thesis repeats a becoming of difference and Otherness. It seeks to fold, refold and unfold an Otherness of representation. Attention is given to the core process of becoming. A disrupted pattern is maintained throughout and, sometimes, this takes the form of a labyrinth produced by an assemblage of inversions and pseudonymous writings. In this way, linear and hierarchical ordering and organization is strongly contested. A textual multiplicity is affirmed, which challenges orthodox organizational thought and conventional philosophy based on the repetition of the same, similar and identity. Experientially, immanence is made material to form an image of thought with fragments, fluctuating speeds and intensities. These folds produce four middles of thought. These arrangements of multiplicities and singularities explicate, implicate and attend to the participation of the Other. The movement is productive of inclusive Heterotopic spaces that are, at once, hospitable to the arrivante, nomads and the repetition of difference. Other theoretical developments are accommodated that address the Eternal Return, autonomy, chance, multitudes, hospitality and the folds of the inside and the outside. The Otherness of Art and Eastern thought are brought forth within the poesis of the thesis. A paradox addressed, amongst others, concerns alterity and the manner in which the thesis has and can be presented, and / or re-presented, to make clear an immanence and socially productive image of thought, which seeks only a repetition of difference. Arko Sen September 2005 THESIS SUBMITTED FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTORATE OF PHILOSOPHY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF LEICESTER BECOMING ET AL INDEX ‘Beneath the pavement, the beach.’ 1 ‘I do not cancel the fact that I am of the opinion that only the will in us is the right end of the tangle, the true entrance to the labyrinth.’2 CONTENT PAGES TITLE PAGE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Mama, disse ele FOREWORD SHAPE-SHIFTING AND DISRUPTED PATTERN MATERIAL ANIMATO 3 A FRENCH OUTING APOTHEOSIS 1-18. ENCASEMENT 18-38. NOCTURNAL SPACES 38-42. PHORIA 42-44. DERPROZEZZ 44-45. HOSPITALITY 45-48. PARRHESIA 48-50. FRAGMENTS 50-51. A FRENCH OUTING 52-53. APPENDIX 1: CINEMATIC EXPRESSION, GROTESQUE REALISM, CARNIVALS AND TEXT 55-59. • WHICH ROAD THEN? 59-60. • DEAD MEN DYING AND SPEAKING 61. • AMERICAN BEAUTY 62-63. • DEAD MEN 63-66. • GROTESUE REALISM 66-68. • FRENCH FAMILY DYING 69. REFERENCES 70-76. 1 This sentiment, which was sprayed by a bystander on the walls of Paris during May 1968, is noted by Michel Foucault in ‘Be Cruel’ : James Miller (2000) (Ed.) The Passion of Michel Foucault Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, pp.165-197. Quote found on pp. 166 & 197. 2 Arthur Schopenhauer (2000) Parerga and Paralipomena. Vol. 1. tr. E.F.J. Payne. Clarendon Press: Oxford, p.68. 3 ‘Animato’ meaning Animated. Taken from ‘Italian Musical Terms’ in Victor Stevenson (1983) (Ed.) Words: An Illustrated History Of Western Languages London: Book Club Associates, p.95. AFFRETTANDO 4 BEING AN INTRODUCTION AND BECOMING ONCE UPON A TIME 77-79. HETEROTOPIA 79-81. A SIMPLE ETHICS OF WRITING 81-85. SPACES OUTSIDE REPRESENTATIONS 85-87. PLEASE ALLOW ME TO INTRODUCE MYSELF 87-89. A SINGULAR PRESENTATION OF REPRESENTATION 89-96. PARTIAL REPRESENTATIONS AT THEIR BEST 96-97. BwO 97-99. FOLDINGS 99-100. DOMAINS OF SENSES 100-102. SIMULTANEOUSLY PRACTICE AND CONCEPT, SOCIALLY ACTUAL AND THEORETICALLY VIRTUAL 102-103. MUSICAL SENSE 104-106. LEARNING SENSE AND EDUCATION ONE SENSE 106-109. COPYING THE SAME EXPLOITATION 109-117. CHANCE WOULD BE A FINE THING 117-119. A CHANGING ACADEMIC APPRENTICESHIP 119-122. WARRIOR ACADEMIC 122-128. WHEN WORDS CANNOT SAY - HURDY GURDY HE SANG 129-132. WRITING LIMITS 132-133. INTIMACY 133-136. WELL I’LL BE BUGGERED 136. VIV LA REVOLUTION AND DIFFERENCE 136-137. RECORDING AND REPETITING THE NON-LINEAR 137-141. APPENDIX 2. NAVIGATIONAL AIDS AND EASTERN GEOGRAPHY 142. • NON DUALITY 143. • DIFFERENTIATION 144. • VOIDS BETWEEN FRAGMENTS 144-145. • PROCESSES 145-147. • EASTERN MOVEMENT 147-148. • MULTI DIMENSIONAL DIFFERENCE 148-149. • LINGERING APPENDICES 149. REFERENCES 150-156. 4 ‘Affrettando’ or Increasing in speed and feeling. Ibid. ACCELERANDO 5 FOLDINGS AND REFOLDINGS AFTER UNFOLDINGS, FOLD UPON FOLD. APORIA, APOPHASIS, ARABESQUE AND ALETHEIA 157-168. ORDERED FORGETTING 168-185. TEXT AS GUEST? 185-196. TERGIVERSATIONS 196-201. TIME 201-204. SPIRITUAL POWER 204-206. APPENDIX 3. TOO PRIVATE A MOMENT • GONE FOR A BURTON 208-209. • CONFESSIONAL BECOMING 209-212. REFERENCES 213-218. AGITATO 6 BECOMING MATERIAL 219-229. CHIRALITY 229-232. SEQUENCING THE LINEAR 232-233. QUOTATIONS 233-237. THINGS PAST NOW PRESENT 238-240. DO WHAT? 240-242. NO SPACES FOR SERVITUDE 242-245. WHAT TO MAKE OF YOUR BODY ? 245-247. UNFOLDING THE MULTIPLICTY OF THOUGHT OR OPENING THE SPACES FOR PERSIAN THOUGHT 247-248. (n - 1) 248-255. STOP FEEDING THE MONSTERS 255. AUTONOMOUS WORKING 255-257. OPERAISMO 257-258. WORKING FOR YOU OR IS IT YOU OR YOU, WHO THEN? 258-262. SELF-VALORISATION 262-274. APPENDIX 4: UNCARVED BLOCK, MAAI OH MA AND A BOOK OF FIVE RINGS • UNCARVED BLOCK 276-277. • MAAI OH MA 277-278. • A BOOK OF FIVE RINGS 278. REFERENCES 279-284. 5 ‘Accelerando’ or Becoming faster. Ibid. 6 ‘Agitato’ or Agitated. Ibid. CONTENT PAGES LIST OF DIAGRAMS 7 DIAGRAMS PLACED BETWEEN THE PAGES AND TEXTS • CIRCLE OF YING AND YANG 13/14. • SLIGHTLY ADAPTED DIAGRAM: STRATEGIC RESPONSES TO THE PROBLEMS OF REFLEXIVITY IN ORGANIZATIONAL THEORY 15/16. • FURTHER ADAPTED DIAGRAM: STRATEGIC RESPONSES TO THE PROBLEMS OF REFLEXIVITY IN ORGANIZATIONAL THEORY 16/17. CHANGING REPRESENTATIONAL DIVIDES, INVERSIONS AND THE MOVING MULTIDIMENSIONALITY OF YING AND YANG 54, 142, 207, 275. A WORK IN PROGRESS SKETCH WHICH EVENTUALLY LED TO THE PAINTING ‘DOLLS HOUSE’ BY JOHN STEWART 320. BIBLIOGRAPHY 285-309. AFTWORD ABOVE THE PAVEMENT THE BEACH 310-317. Mama, disse ele 318. 7 Adapted with the help of David Waldron. Ying and Yang adaptations found on the www. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would come to say to ourselves, like Artaud: ‘I, Antoni Artaud, am my son, my father, my other and myself.’ 8 Possibly with the completion of this thesis and many are theses, it becomes impossible to summon the appropriate adjectives and, therefore, sentences and paragraphs, to truly express the proper gratitude due to all those who should be acknowledged. On the one hand, there are other problems like those concerned with a memory, which fails to remember every relevant incident and event that connected and contributed to the work. On the other hand, there is something left too late, the yet-to-be-completed list of all those who have helped, which evaporated with many other good intentions in the duration of writing a thesis. So for all those who have truly helped, often from the sidelines, by giving physically, emotionally and spiritually, there is now a big thank you. Now let us consider thanks to those who cannot be forgotten. They cannot be forgotten because their contributions were all so great. Very much like Antoni Artaud, there is a child of two parents, a parent of two children, a partner, a colleague to some and a friend of others that writes, acts and thinks now and through the acknowledgements and the thesis. The genetics and thoughts of Balarka and Helena Sen biologically and consciously formed, reformed and facilitated the becoming, which now writes. A sister, named Arya, also made helpful sounds and contrary images to distort what at times might have been a too determined sibling. Thanks are extended to these people and several others, about to be mentioned, who made an assemblage known as a family. Two suns, Svar and Sura, that shone brightly since their births and illuminated the creation of thought, and still today as sons they shine strongly to remind a parent of the beauty of life. There is also a very becoming and beautiful woman, Sharon, who as partner, teacher and many other intensities adds energy to affirm the life of this author. This was done selflessly through some of the difficult times of writing a thesis. In a territory - somewhere between Laurel and Hardy, Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari - there is an intellectual space full of rigour, fun and humour which Lilley and Parker have carved out. Wholehearted thanks must be extended to Simon and Martin for all their thoughts and deeds, which meant so very much during the duration that was supervision. Others at the CPPE, at the University of Leicester, are acknowledged for their intellectual work that helped condition some of the movements of thought in this thesis. The hand of friendship for some has a limited span but it has not been so in this case: thanks go to Paul Grant, John Stewart, John Bergin and Mildred Reynolds who understood as artists, intellects, friends and thinkers some of the territory of thought and through their questioning usefully contributed to the movement. Again Sharon, Svar and Sura get a mention, since they too made strong impressions and expressions on that landscape. Sam Hicks, Josh Johnson and Janet Lavelle are several other friends that helped develop the practical application of these thoughts. Dr. Steve Brown and Dr. Stefano Harney are also thanked for the hospitality to thought demonstrated during the Viva. 8 Helene Cixous (2005) Stigmata, Escaping Text tr. Eric Prenowitz London: Routledge. p.141. Mamae, Disse Ele. (Mama, he said) Daedalus is also a learned artist. He produces works which, like all works of art, contain in fact a seed of death. Ultimately, the only people able to move about in art without risk are those who are in effect strong citizens having some authority within art. Daedalus is the master of dead-ends and invasions. He is at a turning point, at the passageway. Author of works which lead to going astray, inventor of the labyrinth; and also inventor of the antidote, maker of wings which on the other hand give man superhuman power; and which on the other attribute to him a supplementary genos, a supplementary genus. Is this man who flies still and only a man? When he is a bit bird? Thus hybrid. Through Daedalus, who steers from one extreme to the other, we thus have access to a passage, to the trans, to the crossing of borders, to the de-limitations of genuses- genders-genres and species, to construction and to deconstruction, to metamorphosis. Through Daedalus I mean a Joyce. With the call of his name, Daedalus leads monsters, mutants, chimeras. His story is an entanglement of prison and freedom. He constructed the labyrinth under the orders of Minos, to lock up the Minotaur; this implies also the monster, half bull half man, was to be preserved. The Minotaur is very much a monster, but after all Icarus and Daedalus are other monsters, other human anomalies. Daedalus revealed the secret of the labyrinth’s exit to Ariadne to help her save Theseus, who had been sent to confront the Minotaur in the labyrinth no one can leave. All it takes is not letting go of the thread. This is also a lesson in reading, when you are in the labyrinth of a text, and a text is a labyrinth, a text which was not a labyrinth would not be a text, a labyrinth has its coherence, the rooms communicate with one another, and as a rule one cannot escape, which is a good thing, one must enter the labyrinth of a text with a thread. But, a friend of lovers, Daedalus was punished and locked up without thread . His line was cut, it’s the same old story of the telephone. He was thus locked up without a thread but with his son Icarus, and as always he finds the easiest way to escape what’s inescapable. (,italics original) Helene Cixous (2005) “‘Mamae, Disse Ele,’or Joyce’s Second Hand.” in Stigmata, Escaping Text tr. Eric Prenowitz London: Routledge. pp.131-169. Quote pp.138-139. BECOMING ET AL FOREWORD SHAPE-SHIFTING AND DISRUPTED PATTERN MATERIAL Starting with a principle is affirmed by people of experience to be a very reasonable procedure; Soren Kierkegaard.1 Tirelessly, Jarmusch speaks of how he conceives his films “from the inside out, " how he starts with an actor in mind, how he draws from the collection of random notes that he is constantly jotting down, and how he lets the story and mood evolve from that[...] ‘But I don't want to give a whole back story...I have one. For me, sometimes it's too condescending to have to explain'. Jarmusch in Ludvig Hertzberg. 2 I had gathered at least a hundred and fifty pages of quotes about fog. I must truly have taken the subject to heart. Here was Abbott’s Flatland, a country of just two dimensions, inhabited only by planar figures: triangles, squares, polygons. And how do they recognize each other if they cannot see each other from above and so perceive only lines? Thanks to fog: “Wherever there is a rich supply of Fog, objects that are at a distance, say three feet, are appreciably dimmer than those at the distance of two feet eleven inches; and the result is that by careful and constant experimental observation of comparative dimness and clearness, we are enabled to infer with great exactness the configuration of the object observed." Blessed are these triangles who wander in the midst and can see things - here a hexagon, there a parallelogram. Two dimensional, but luckier than I. (textual change original) Umberto Eco. 3 A’s INTRODUCTION A singularity known as A had a becoming. It had been anticipated by Franz Kafka as K. In their very own becomings, Bataille and Kierkegaard had also anticipated this event along with some others; their singularities were also explicated and denoted by single letters of the alphabet. They likewise anticipated the arrival of another. Perhaps, the assemblage of all four letters of the alphabets constituted another, still flowing, multiplicity. A now considered very carefully what was to be moved. It was thought. It had to be moved to this position from, a space somewhere further away, near the bibliography. A had always felt there was a stoppage to the flow and, because of that, what was now the most proximal text, with its connected thoughts and leakages, should have been set adrift. 1 Seren Kierkegaard (1949) Either / Or: A Fragment of Life. Vol. 1. tr. David F.Swenson and Lillian Marvin Swenson. Princeton: Princeton University Press, p.234. 2 Ludvig Hertzberg (2001) (Ed.) Jim Jarmusch Interviews. Mississippi: University of Mississippi Press: The first part of the quote is from the Introduction p. vii. And the second part of the quote is Jim Jarmusch’s own words, taken from his interview with Chris Campion and entitled ‘East Meets West’ p.199. Umberto Eco (2005) The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana: An Illustrated Novel, tr. Geoffrey Brock. London: Seeker & Warburg, pp.59-60.
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