File spoon-archives/deleuze-guattari.archive/deleuze-guattari_2001/deleuze-guattari.0112, message 85


Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2001 06:43:34 +0000 (GMT)
From: =?iso-8859-1?q?pierre=20guyotat?= <pierreguyotat-AT-yahoo.co.uk>


Other points you make have been considered by Jacques
Derria in Of Grammatology, but none have dared to make
this quantum leap you are inferring between Vico
Derria and Deleuze; is this for an undergraduate very
general review you are writing? Try a few secondary
books and then re-read all of Platon and Aristotle for
a start. Hehehe it might help your iterability!!

-------------
From: "Yuri gargarin" <yurigargarin-AT-hotmail.com>
Subject: The Question of Repetition
Date: Tue, 18 Dec 2001 19:51:51 -0500

I think if we want really to appreciate the
singularity of the Deleuzian 
treatment of the question of repetition, we need to
trace the trajectory (or 
the repetition) of the question of repetition itself.
I propose that we 
start a discussion of this befuddling question from
Vico, Kierkegaard, 
Nietzsche, through Joyce, Heideggar, to Derrida, who
actually repeats 
Deleuze, but defamiliarizes us with the signifier by
calling repetition 
"iterability". I am not really sure about the
singularity with which the 
above-mentioned thinkers have dealt with the question,
and I would 
appreciate it if somebody throws some light on the
differences, if any, of 
the repetitive engagement with the question of
repetition.
Nouri Gana





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