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Thought in the Act: Passages in the Ecology of Experience
University of Minnesota Press, 2014 Cloth: 978-0-8166-7966-9 | Paper: 978-0-8166-7967-6 Library of Congress Classification BF408.M2346 2014 Dewey Decimal Classification 153.35
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
“Every practice is a mode of thought, already in the act. To dance: a thinking in movement. To paint: a thinking through color. To perceive in the everyday: a thinking of the world’s varied ways of affording itself.” —from Thought in the Act Emerging from active collaborations, the book analyzes the experiential work of the architects and conceptual artists Arakawa and Gins, the improvisational choreographic techniques of William Forsythe, the recent painting practice of Bracha Ettinger, as well as autistic writers’ self-descriptions of their perceptual world and the experimental event making of the SenseLab collective. Drawing from the idiosyncratic vocabularies of each creative practice, and building on the vocabulary of process philosophy, the book reactivates rather than merely describes the artistic processes it examines. The result is a thinking-with and a writing-in-collaboration-with these processes and a demonstration of how philosophy co-composes with the act in the making. Thought in the Act enacts a collaborative mode of thinking in the act at the intersection of art, philosophy, and politics. See other books on: Act | Experience | Massumi, Brian | Thought | Thought and thinking See other titles from University of Minnesota Press |
Nearby on shelf for Psychology / Consciousness. Cognition:
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