TY - BOOK AU - Surin,Kenneth TI - Deleuze and Guattari : selected writings PY - 2020/// CY - London PB - Bloomsbury KW - Deleuze, Gilles, KW - Guattari, FĂ©lix, KW - Political science KW - Philosophy KW - Philosophy, Marxist KW - Materialism KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Dedication -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1. The "Epochality" of Deleuzean Thought... -- Chapter 2. Deleuze's Three Ontologies -- Chapter 3. Was Deleuze a Materialist? -- Chapter 4. Force as a Deleuzean Concept -- Chapter 5. On Producing the Concept of the Image-Concept -- Chapter 6. "A Question of an Axiomatic of Desires": The Deleuzean Imagination of Geoliterature -- Chapter 7. "Existing Not as a Subject but as a Work of Art" - The Task of Ethics? or Aesthetics? -- Chapter 8. The Socius and Life -- Chapter 9. "1000 Political Subjects..." -- Chapter 10. The Radical Event? -- Chapter 11. On Producing (the Concept of) Solidarity --Chapter 12. What Is Becoming-Animal? The Politics of Deleuze and Guattari's "Strange Notion" -- Chapter 13. The Society of Control and the Managed Citizen -- Chapter 14. The Undecidable and the Fugitive: Mille Plateaux and the State-Form -- Chapter 15. "Reinventing a Physiology of Collective Liberation": Going "Beyond Marx" in the Marxism(s) of Negri, Guattari, and Deleuze -- Chapter 16. Mao's "On Contradiction," Mao-Hegel/Mao-Deleuze -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index; Also available in print: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019. Digital resource published 2019 N2 - "Kenneth Surin's work represents a sustained engagement with the thought of Deleuze and Guattari over more than two decades, on a wide range of topics, from aesthetics and literature to capitalism and Marxism. The thematic thread of this collection is politics, tackling both central political issues, such as the State, globalization and the citizen, as well as the political qualities of topics generally considered outside this realm, such as the animal, the image and the literary. Surin pursue theoretical interventions inspired by Deleuze and Guattari's scholarship in relation to Marxism and specifically materialism and notions of political solidarity, which they did not engage with extensively or explicitly themselves, but which extend their critique along new lines of flight. Lastly, Surin demonstrates the breadth and lasting relevance of Deleuze and Guattari's legacy by tracing the affinities between Deleuze and Marxist sociologist Antonio Negri and Raymond Williams, one of the founders of cultural studies as a discipline"--Bloomsbury Collections UR - https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350103122?locatt=label:secondary_bloomsburyCollections ER -