Actions and Abstractions: Deleuzian Lines of Flight

Deleuze, Tarde, and Molecular Politics

16 min · 28 de sep de 2025
Portada del episodio Deleuze, Tarde, and Molecular Politics

Descripción

The provided text is an excerpt from a scholarly paper by Julius Telivuo, titled "Deleuze, Tarde and Molecular Politics," which discusses the political and social ontology in the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, focusing on the concept of micropolitics. The author explains that Deleuze, along with Félix Guattari, rejects traditional views of community and instead uses a microscopic perspective to analyze the socio-political sphere, prioritizing concrete, non-conscious social processes over molar representations like class or gender. A significant portion of the paper is dedicated to discussing the influence of Gabriel Tarde’s microsociology, which emphasizes social phenomena as the result of individual-level processes like imitation, opposition, and invention. Ultimately, the paper argues for understanding communality through immanent, pre-individual processes (molecular flows), contrasting them with the static, conscious, and representational molar structures while also introducing the concept of a line of flight as the potential for radical change.

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18 episodios

episode The Micropolitics of True Representation artwork

The Micropolitics of True Representation

This deep dive examines the 2025 book, "TRM: A Deleuzian Encounter,"6 [https://www.amazon.com/TRM-Deleuzian-Encounter-Ahmed-Bouzid-ebook/dp/B0GX36W1NR]which introduces The True Representation Movement (TRM) as a practical political application of the complex philosophy of Gilles Deleuze. The author argues that modern democracy is structurally broken because a professional political class has severed the link between the will of the people and legislative action. To remedy this, TRM utilizes a randomly selected swarm of citizens to deliberate and provide binding instructions to their representative, ensuring the official acts only as a direct conduit for public desire. By utilizing Deleuzian metaphors such as the fold, the knot, and the rhizome, the source explains how small-scale, "micropolitical" changes can eventually transform the entire national landscape. Rather than seeking a violent revolution, the movement advocates for creating pockets of true representation that grow organically to bypass traditional party capture and corporate influence. Ultimately, the book presents TRM not just as a policy reform, but as a living experiment in becoming that restores agency to ordinary individuals through a recursive feedback loop.

Ayer26 min
episode To Become a Seer: Deleuze on Art, Politics and Resistance artwork

To Become a Seer: Deleuze on Art, Politics and Resistance

This is a deep dive into Keren Shahar’s article, To Become a Seer: Deleuze on Art, Politics and Resistance [ https://www.academia.edu/144923480/To_Become_a_Seer_Deleuze_on_Art_Politics_and_Resistance], which examines the philosophical intersections of art, aesthetics, and politics through the lens of Gilles Deleuze’s thought. The author argues that modern capitalism and representational thinking limit human vision to superficial clichés, effectively masking the "intolerable" realities of the present. By analyzing the work of painter Francis Bacon, the text explores how art can function as a "seer" that renders invisible forces and intensities sensible. This process of capturing forces is framed as a creative form of political resistance rather than a mere reaction to existing power structures. Ultimately, Shahar suggests that by breaking through mediated screens of perception, art and philosophy can together invoke new collective modes of existence and alternative futures.

Ayer46 min
episode Deleuze’s Politics: From Marxism to the Missing People artwork

Deleuze’s Politics: From Marxism to the Missing People

This deep dive examines a paper by Alain Beaulieu [https://www.academia.edu/38356538/Gilles_Deleuze_s_Politics_from_Marxism_to_the_Missing_People] which examines the political philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, highlighting his unique resistance to global capitalism and the modern democratic state. Deleuze is characterized as a "Marxist without being Marxist," rejecting traditional party affiliation and violent revolutions in favor of a continuous struggle against repressive social apparatuses. He argues that both neoliberalism and psychoanalysis stifle human desire, which he believes should instead function like a "war machine" to disrupt established hierarchies. Central to this thought is the concept of a "missing people," a collection of marginalized or nomadic individuals who resist the status quo through minor art and literature. Ultimately, Deleuzian politics shifts away from institutional power toward an ethical experimentation with singular lifestyles and creative defiance.

19 de jun de 202640 min
episode Deleuze, Tarde, and Molecular Politics artwork

Deleuze, Tarde, and Molecular Politics

The provided text is an excerpt from a scholarly paper by Julius Telivuo, titled "Deleuze, Tarde and Molecular Politics," which discusses the political and social ontology in the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, focusing on the concept of micropolitics. The author explains that Deleuze, along with Félix Guattari, rejects traditional views of community and instead uses a microscopic perspective to analyze the socio-political sphere, prioritizing concrete, non-conscious social processes over molar representations like class or gender. A significant portion of the paper is dedicated to discussing the influence of Gabriel Tarde’s microsociology, which emphasizes social phenomena as the result of individual-level processes like imitation, opposition, and invention. Ultimately, the paper argues for understanding communality through immanent, pre-individual processes (molecular flows), contrasting them with the static, conscious, and representational molar structures while also introducing the concept of a line of flight as the potential for radical change.

28 de sep de 202516 min
episode Deleuze: Political Economy, Materialistic Dialectics, and Speculative Philosophy artwork

Deleuze: Political Economy, Materialistic Dialectics, and Speculative Philosophy

This Deep Dive examines a collection of interpretations of Gilles Deleuze's philosophy, aiming to reveal its revolutionary potential beyond common perceptions. It addresses how Deleuze's ideas have been both embraced and critiqued by various contemporary intellectual movements, including Marxist traditions and speculative philosophy. The articles within this collection explore the political significance of Deleuze's thought, his renewal of political economy, and the complex relationship between his philosophy and materialistic dialectics. Ultimately, the issue seeks to reclaim Deleuze's legacy from interpretations that might reduce it to either a cynical justification of the status quo or a mystical escape from reality.

25 de jul de 202518 min