Description

Book Synopsis
Through readings of works of film, literature, and philosophy, Eugenie Brinkema shifts understandings of the horror genre away from bodily gore and the spectator's shudder and toward how the genre's sequencing, order, diagrams, and treatment of bodies forces readers to confront ethical questions of the limits of thinking and being.

Trade Review
“Eugenie Brinkema's unbounded erudition is matched only by her creativity, startling capacity for thought, and her inimitable writing. In Life-Destroying Diagrams she mobilizes the history of philosophy while providing breathtaking and entirely unanticipated readings of individual films. Her virtuosity is on full display, resulting in a book that is itself as literary as it is scholarly. Standing to reshape the possibilities of film studies as a field and suggest new and thrilling ways in which one can practice it, Life-Destroying Diagrams is an event.” -- Akira Mizuta Lippit, author of * Cinema without Reflection: Jacques Derrida’s Echopoiesis and Narcissism Adrift *
“Though it mentions Kubrick only once, Life-Destroying Diagrams is the 2001 of critical theory: a dazzling, erudite, and trippy ride across millennia of human culture that leads us into a formalist space, beyond allegorical interpretation, to an encounter—horrifying and thrilling at once—with what, in human experience, remains ‘nonaffective, nonsignifying, and impersonal.’ Eugenie Brinkema, in this breathtaking escape from the gravitational pull of the ‘already-known,’ takes us, unflinchingly, beyond ourselves.” -- Lee Edelman, author of * No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive *
"Life-Destroying Diagrams is spectacularly original and entirely unique . . . very much its own totalizing system, a diagram of how to think cinematic form." -- Rosalind Galt * Film Quarterly *
"Life-Destroying Diagrams is a model of close reading as process, subject to the same contingency and sensitivity to difference as its objects. The book’s configuration and design approach the formal problems of staying faithful to what is most fragile, of losing inheritance, of provisional thinking without a guaranteed outcome. The fidelity of a close reading is sustained by the promise that there is no such thing as too close. That there is no exhausting a reading whose ground is uncertain, unsteady, and new. A close reading is never finished, only abandoned — so consider this a beginning." -- Jorge Cotte * Los Angeles Review of Books *
"As Life-Destroying Diagrams proceeds, the furious interconnectedness of plots, forms, scene descriptions, and etymologies makes for riveting but exhausting reading, leaving one to wonder who or what is really meant to be put to the test. As tests go, Brinkema bracingly refuses to spare the reader as much if not more than the films under discussion do." -- Alexandra Kingston-Reese * Los Angeles Review of Books *
Life-Destroying Diagrams probes deep into the viscera of what form means . . . to an extent that no-one quite has before.” -- Caroline Bem * Screen *
Life-Destroying Diagrams demonstrates that the language of form can reinvigorate the act of close reading and attend to the possibilities that are produced through the cinematic object itself.” -- Jacob Carter * InVisible Culture *
“This book is not about horror, but about reading affect from form. . . . What results in Life-Destroying Diagrams is a provocative and commanding intervention into aesthetic theory that can enliven what has already been preconceived within scholarship on horror and within the larger fields of Visual Culture Studies, Literary Studies, Cinema Studies, and Continental Philosophy.” -- Marissa C de Baca * Journal of Visual Culture *
"Life-Destroying Diagrams is a beautiful book. . . . Although the book’s content is intricately structured, its physical form extends an invitation to leaf through it, browse for something that catches the eye, dip in and see where it takes you. And if one does so, there is at least one striking claim on every single page." -- Dominic Lash * Year’s Work in Critical and Cultural Theory *

"Brinkema’s latest book, Life-Destroying Diagrams, offers a groundbreaking and distinctive conversation between cinema, film theory and Continental philosophy. Another way of describing the book is as a radically innovative approach to academic writing about film in general, where there is as much possibility for interpreting the book’s very form as there is for interpreting the substance of its arguments. ... [A] fascinating, distinctive and challenging intervention."

-- Archie Wolfman * Film Philosophy *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations xi
Exordia xv
1. Horrēre Or 1
2. The Ordinal (Death by Design) 36
Interlude I. Abecedarium 81
Interlude II. Rhythm & Feel 101
Lapsus 119
Interlude III. Objects, Relations, Shape 125
3. Grid, Table, Failure, Line 145
Two Violences 193
4. Middle-Term Notations: Letter, Number, Diagram 202
Postscript. ars formularia: Radical Formalism and the Speculative Task 251
Love and Measurement 289
Acknowledgments (On the Erotics of the Colleague) 371
Notes 379
Bibliography 421
Index 443

LifeDestroying Diagrams

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    A Hardback by Eugenie Brinkema

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      View other formats and editions of LifeDestroying Diagrams by Eugenie Brinkema

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 15/02/2022
      ISBN13: 9781478013433, 978-1478013433
      ISBN10: 1478013435

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Through readings of works of film, literature, and philosophy, Eugenie Brinkema shifts understandings of the horror genre away from bodily gore and the spectator's shudder and toward how the genre's sequencing, order, diagrams, and treatment of bodies forces readers to confront ethical questions of the limits of thinking and being.

      Trade Review
      “Eugenie Brinkema's unbounded erudition is matched only by her creativity, startling capacity for thought, and her inimitable writing. In Life-Destroying Diagrams she mobilizes the history of philosophy while providing breathtaking and entirely unanticipated readings of individual films. Her virtuosity is on full display, resulting in a book that is itself as literary as it is scholarly. Standing to reshape the possibilities of film studies as a field and suggest new and thrilling ways in which one can practice it, Life-Destroying Diagrams is an event.” -- Akira Mizuta Lippit, author of * Cinema without Reflection: Jacques Derrida’s Echopoiesis and Narcissism Adrift *
      “Though it mentions Kubrick only once, Life-Destroying Diagrams is the 2001 of critical theory: a dazzling, erudite, and trippy ride across millennia of human culture that leads us into a formalist space, beyond allegorical interpretation, to an encounter—horrifying and thrilling at once—with what, in human experience, remains ‘nonaffective, nonsignifying, and impersonal.’ Eugenie Brinkema, in this breathtaking escape from the gravitational pull of the ‘already-known,’ takes us, unflinchingly, beyond ourselves.” -- Lee Edelman, author of * No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive *
      "Life-Destroying Diagrams is spectacularly original and entirely unique . . . very much its own totalizing system, a diagram of how to think cinematic form." -- Rosalind Galt * Film Quarterly *
      "Life-Destroying Diagrams is a model of close reading as process, subject to the same contingency and sensitivity to difference as its objects. The book’s configuration and design approach the formal problems of staying faithful to what is most fragile, of losing inheritance, of provisional thinking without a guaranteed outcome. The fidelity of a close reading is sustained by the promise that there is no such thing as too close. That there is no exhausting a reading whose ground is uncertain, unsteady, and new. A close reading is never finished, only abandoned — so consider this a beginning." -- Jorge Cotte * Los Angeles Review of Books *
      "As Life-Destroying Diagrams proceeds, the furious interconnectedness of plots, forms, scene descriptions, and etymologies makes for riveting but exhausting reading, leaving one to wonder who or what is really meant to be put to the test. As tests go, Brinkema bracingly refuses to spare the reader as much if not more than the films under discussion do." -- Alexandra Kingston-Reese * Los Angeles Review of Books *
      Life-Destroying Diagrams probes deep into the viscera of what form means . . . to an extent that no-one quite has before.” -- Caroline Bem * Screen *
      Life-Destroying Diagrams demonstrates that the language of form can reinvigorate the act of close reading and attend to the possibilities that are produced through the cinematic object itself.” -- Jacob Carter * InVisible Culture *
      “This book is not about horror, but about reading affect from form. . . . What results in Life-Destroying Diagrams is a provocative and commanding intervention into aesthetic theory that can enliven what has already been preconceived within scholarship on horror and within the larger fields of Visual Culture Studies, Literary Studies, Cinema Studies, and Continental Philosophy.” -- Marissa C de Baca * Journal of Visual Culture *
      "Life-Destroying Diagrams is a beautiful book. . . . Although the book’s content is intricately structured, its physical form extends an invitation to leaf through it, browse for something that catches the eye, dip in and see where it takes you. And if one does so, there is at least one striking claim on every single page." -- Dominic Lash * Year’s Work in Critical and Cultural Theory *

      "Brinkema’s latest book, Life-Destroying Diagrams, offers a groundbreaking and distinctive conversation between cinema, film theory and Continental philosophy. Another way of describing the book is as a radically innovative approach to academic writing about film in general, where there is as much possibility for interpreting the book’s very form as there is for interpreting the substance of its arguments. ... [A] fascinating, distinctive and challenging intervention."

      -- Archie Wolfman * Film Philosophy *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations xi
      Exordia xv
      1. Horrēre Or 1
      2. The Ordinal (Death by Design) 36
      Interlude I. Abecedarium 81
      Interlude II. Rhythm & Feel 101
      Lapsus 119
      Interlude III. Objects, Relations, Shape 125
      3. Grid, Table, Failure, Line 145
      Two Violences 193
      4. Middle-Term Notations: Letter, Number, Diagram 202
      Postscript. ars formularia: Radical Formalism and the Speculative Task 251
      Love and Measurement 289
      Acknowledgments (On the Erotics of the Colleague) 371
      Notes 379
      Bibliography 421
      Index 443

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