Love the post over at Arcade Fire. It reminds me a lot of what Molly Anne Rothenberg calls "Retroversive Causality" or "extimate causality" in her book _The Excessive Subject_. For Rothenberg this type of causation (or irony, in your terms) works even at the sentence level when we read something like the following:
"He caressed her skin with a knife."
What initially sounds lovely, suddenly turns violent, and we have to read the whole sentence in a new way.
Rothenberg's point is that this type of causation changes the entire playing field or environment retroactively (and both internally and externally), so that new ideas, significations, or (I would add) objects have to be taken into account. In other words, it opens up a space for us to see the excess in the everyday.
I'm thinking it might also be the way withdrawal works - as a type of uncanny return, a moment when we are confronted with the excess of an object. Any thoughts?
Hey Tim,
ReplyDeleteLove the post over at Arcade Fire. It reminds me a lot of what Molly Anne Rothenberg calls "Retroversive Causality" or "extimate causality" in her book _The Excessive Subject_. For Rothenberg this type of causation (or irony, in your terms) works even at the sentence level when we read something like the following:
"He caressed her skin with a knife."
What initially sounds lovely, suddenly turns violent, and we have to read the whole sentence in a new way.
Rothenberg's point is that this type of causation changes the entire playing field or environment retroactively (and both internally and externally), so that new ideas, significations, or (I would add) objects have to be taken into account. In other words, it opens up a space for us to see the excess in the everyday.
- Nate
Oops, I think I wrote "Arcade Fire" instead of "Arcade". If I did, then I curse pop-culture. If not, then disregard this comment.
ReplyDeleteHey thanks Nate. I was meaning to get around to reading that. Apolepsis is also the way evolution works....
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking it might also be the way withdrawal works - as a type of uncanny return, a moment when we are confronted with the excess of an object. Any thoughts?
ReplyDelete