Thursday, 7 November 2024
Doing Justice to Poetry: Gadamer and Derrida on Reading Paul Celan
Monday, 17 June 2024
Hauntology and Lost Futures: Trauma Narratives in the Contemporary Gothic
A post by Emma Dee
Introduction
We begin, not with a text, but with an image.
This is a depiction of a painting by Caspar David Friedrich, a well-known German Romantic painter and explorer of the sublime. Not only is this a representation of what many of us might think of when we hear the term ‘Gothic,’ but the story of this particular image might help elucidate a concept of hauntology that this article is exploring. This picture is not the original.
Tuesday, 30 April 2024
Thursday, 21 March 2024
(2/2) Specters in the Computer: A Hauntological Interpretation of Vaporwave
A post by Borna Šućurović
**This is the latter part of the article; the former comes before.
Fisher's Intervention: Lost Futures and the Spectral Not Yet
Before we bring Derrida's hauntology in connection with vaporwave it is important to note two additional points, the first of which has to do with terminology. Throughout the French original of the Specters of Marx Derrida uses two 'names' for specters: la spectre and le revenant. While the former tries to express at once all of the properties explained in the previous chapter, the latter places particular emphasis on the reversible function of spectral existents. Le revenant – in both French and English languages – denotes a 'returning ghost', one who returns from somewhere. By using this name Derrida is attempting to show how specters return into temporal planes they do not belong to and within which certain forms of the work of mourning are already underway. As Merlin Coverley writes in the third chapter of his Hauntology;
(1/2) Specters in the Computer: A Hauntological Interpretation of Vaporwave
A post by Borna Šućurović
Introduction
On February 29th, 2016 a video entitled S U N D A Y S C H O O L was uploaded to YouTube and quickly became known as one of the first examples of what has since been dubbed simpsonwave. The video follows Bart Simpson's time spent going to Sunday school and getting to know Jessica, the daughter of reverend Lovejoy with whom he falls unhappily in love. While these events are taking place, the song Teen Pregnancy by Blank Banshee – in which an androgynous voice repeats the phrases "I'm just a kid" and "It was just a little mistake" over the beats of synthesizer-infused music – is playing in the background. A VHS filter is present throughout the entire duration of the video, giving off the impression that the footage was saved from a video cassette from the mid-1990s and subsequently digitized.
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