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261. Chiasmi International: Volume > 23
David M. Bertet, Bettina Bergo Phenomenological aesthetics and the “Manufacture of the Guilty (Fabricación de culpables)”
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This article opens with a discussion of incarceration in the time of Covid 19. The story of one of the inmates in the high-security prison of Puente Grande (Mexico) leads us back to the beginning of the fifteen-year-long imprisonment of an innocent and, with it, to a complex narrative. The story concerns the use of the juridical concepts of delincuencia organizada (organized crime), racketeering, and kidnapping. As a charge it has been repeatedly implemented in what has come to be called la fabricaciόn de culpables (the “manufacture of the guilty”) in Mexico, Columbia, Argentina, and Brazil. Although the legal terminology changes, false incarceration is hardly limited to Central and South America. This is therefore a cautionary tale about how charges – and people – are framed, and how the latter are tried on social and corporate media, even before their official trials begin.
262. Chiasmi International: Volume > 23
Martina Ferrari Bearing witness beyond colonial epistemologies: Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui’s critical phenomenology of deep silence
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This paper is one in a series of attempts on my part to think through one of the central challenges left to us by Merleau-Ponty’s sudden death in 1961: if we understand the turn, in his later writings, toward an ontology of the flesh as “a radical rethinking of the experience of belonging from within, [as] a phenomenology of being-of-the-world” (Landes 2020, 141), how are we to bear witness to such an experience? What modalities are called forth to do justice to this belonging? The task accrues existential and ethical weight when, at stake in our analyses, are historical and social structures like coloniality that normalize experience, perception, and sense-making while marginalizing others. It is my contention, in this article, that when the phenomenological inquiry becomes critical the question of modality becomes ethically central; how we bear witness to experiences of marginalization and the operations of power that produce them matters in that it risks reifying the same normative structures that predicate the oppression of many. With these questions and considerations in mind, in this article, I return to silence and propose that the mobilization of what I call “deep silences” can be a powerful tool for a critical phenomenology that bears witness without capitulating to the imperative of transparency norming the modern/colonial world system. Deep silence, in fact, designates signifying practices that do not primarily operate within the bounds of logocentrism and speech as the foundational principles of meaning, or that rely upon conceptual, analytical, and instrumental thinking, mobilizing instead the somatic, affective, and sensual dimensions of existence. In this article, I am primary concerned with the sense-making effected by the aesthetic as an instance of deep silence. Specifically, I focus on the image- and ritual-centered photographic documentaries of Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui, which, I suggest, challenge the hegemonic normativity of modern/colonial aesthetics, introducing the reader to other sensibilities wherein the distinction between theory and practice has no purchase and the multiplicity of creative expressions is recognized.
263. Chiasmi International: Volume > 23
Kris Sealey ‘Then’ and ‘now’ of mangrove time: the temporality of lived blackness in Octavia Butler’s Kindred
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Using Octavia Butler’s Kindred as both ground and frame, this paper develops a notion of mangrove time as a way to think through how blackness is lived in the violent temporality of anti-blackness. Specifically, I want to suggest that, through the frame of mangrove time, an errant relationship between lived blackness and its black past inserts temporal possibility in and beyond the inertia of white supremacy’s violently anti-black temporality. In other words, contrary to Fanon’s proclamation that only black abjection is to be found in a return to the past of lived blackness, I show that, out of a mangroved conception of temporality, linkages to a black past becomes more than the ontological weight at the core of Fanon’s notion of a historico-racial schema. In foregrounding his own linkage to the past, Fanon’s historico-racial schema determines the past as fixed under the weight of an anti-black time. However, mangrove time recalls what is perhaps hastily forgotten under this schema, which is that, even as lived blackness arrives on the scene of an anti-black imaginary “too late”, it is still able to ‘time travel’ – to zigzag between present and past in a way that rescues lived blackness from the structural determination of its past. As mangroved, this temporality is still one of pain, amputation and fragmentation. But it is also one that opens up this temporality to “imaginative variability”.
264. Chiasmi International: Volume > 23
Sarah Fayad Shame and ethics in Merleau-Ponty’s intersubjectivity: radical responsibility of the flesh and communities of the incommensurate
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Much work has been done, recently, on the harms and benefits of shaming. One may argue, for example, that feeling shamed inherently alienates and forecloses, and thus quite harmful to a compulsorily social and futurally oriented creature. This does not, however, preclude the argument that shame is ethically useful, providing, at a very basic, felt level, the absolute prohibitions such a social, futural, creature requires. This paper does not claim to finally evaluate shame itself. Instead I look to Merleau-Ponty, seeking the fleshly and felt structures of the social world – of our innate proximity and intimacy, as well as our isolation and alienation – within the embodied phenomenon of being ashamed. From the contours of this spontaneous, yet admittedly dangerous, corporeo-social phenomenon, there is comes an intimation of an ethics of the flesh: one which compels us to at least attempt to heed the often opaque, even mysterious powers of our bodies, not only for the good of our intimate others, but for the good of entire peoples.
265. Chiasmi International: Volume > 23
Lovisa Andén Being in language: Merleau-Ponty’s ontological examinations of language at the Collège de France
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This article examines Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s ontological investigation of language in his recently published course notes Sur le problème de la parole of 1954. In the course notes, Merleau-Ponty approaches the relation between being and language: if our ontological thinking is thoroughly conditioned by the means of expression provided by our proper language, how are we then to understand its claims of universality? The article argues that the course notes elucidate the linguistic turn in Merleau-Ponty’s later ontology. In particular, this article stresses that the course notes show that Merleau-Ponty undertakes an ontological inquiry into language before his investment into Heidegger’s philosophy. Furthermore, the course notes elucidate the continuity between Merleau-Ponty’s earlier investigations into expression and the ontological inquiry into language in his later texts.
266. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Len Lawlor Two Unpublished Notes on Music
267. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Kurt Duaer Keller Intentionality in Perspectival Structure
268. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Fabio Ciaramelli A Note on Desire and its Limit in Merleau-Ponty and Levinas (abstract)
269. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Mario Teodoro Ramírez Cobián Merleau-Ponty’s Concept of Tradition (abstract)
270. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Enrica Lisciani-Petrini To Modulate “l’insaisissable dans l’immanence” (abstract)
271. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Michael Gendre Philosophy and the Question of Non-Philosophy in Merleau-Ponty’s Notes de Cours 1959-1961
272. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Mauro Carbone, Leonard Lawlor Introduction
273. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Davide Scarso “Merleau-Ponty, Feminism, and Intersubjectivity”.: Twenty-fifth Annual Meeting of the Merleau-Ponty Circle, in Washington DC, from September 14-16, 2000.
274. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Livres Reçus - Books Received - Libri Ricevuti
275. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Colloques et Séminaires - Conferences and Seminars - Convegni e Seminari
276. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Ted Toadvine Chiasm and Chiaroscuro: The Logic of the Epochê
277. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Myriam Revault d’Allonnes Merleau-Ponty: The Philosopher and Politics (abstract)
278. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Calvin O. Schrag The Ethical and Political in the Philosophy of Merleau-Ponty
279. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Cecilia Sjöholm The Expression of Another in Me (Part One)
280. Chiasmi International: Volume > 3
Wayne Froman “Speech as Praxis”?