Excerpt for video above:
Michelle Foucault in his preface to Deleuze and Guattari's "Anti-Oedipus" states that the key question it asks is, "How does one keep from being fascist?", even especially, when one believes oneself to be a revolutionary militant? How do we rid our speech, and our acts, our hearts, and our pleasures of fascism? how do we ferret out the fascism that is ingrained in our behavior?
The Christian moralists sought out the traces of the flesh lodged deep with in the soul. Deleuze & Guattari, for their part, pursue the slightest traces of fascism in the body. And indeed, I believe that this tracing out of fascism is done by James Joyce in "Finnegans Wake", in which he seeks to subvert the fascistic authority of the author of overdetermining meaning, of commanding meaning and forcing it upon the reader. And instead, he lays out a style, which keenly takes advantage of paronomasia, which is a fancy word for "puns". And in this lecture, I would like to, by exploring first the etymology of this word paronomasia open us into a discussion of Deleuze & Guattari's concept of "the plane of imminence" which I think is a really helpful way of conceptualizing the textual philosophy of Finnegans Wake. We will see how Joyce takes advantage of an "*accretive method" that subverts hierarchies and instead vies for a flat ontology in which a variety of elements enter into confluence with the equal potential to yield exciting results.
The phrase "every tellin' has a tailing" is a line from James Joyce's novel "Finnegans Wake," signifying that every story or narrative always has a consequence or "tail" that follows it; essentially, there's always a lingering effect to any tale told.
Marshall McLuhan, a Canadian media scholar and theorist, said that reading is "to guess" because words have multiple meanings.
Explanation:
Explanation:
McLuhan believed that reading is a rapid guessing game because words have many meanings.
To select a meaning for a word in context, readers must quickly guess which meaning to use.
This rapid guessing makes good readers quick decision makers, which can make them good executives.
McLuhan is best known for his phrase "the medium is the message". This phrase suggests that the medium used to communicate information has a significant impact on the message itself. McLuhan believed that each medium is a unique environment that reshapes people and culture. He also coined the term "global village".
McLuhan's ideas are related to technological determinism, which is the theory that technology and how people interact in society are connected.
John Maus, "Believer"
Telephone lines all across the worldPeople fight all across the worldAngels sing all across the worldBaby, you and me all across the worldJackie Chan flashing all across the worldHulk Hogan flashing all across the worldLet's go fly all across the worldLet's go fly all across the world
They call me the believerAnd I'm not coming back
They call me the believerAnd I'm not coming back
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