Untoward laughter and the micropolitical: (Record no. 12937)

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Personal name Sharpe, Scott
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Title Untoward laughter and the micropolitical:
Sub Title social action, politics and the will after the sovereign subject
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Name of publisher, distributor, etc sage
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2020
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Pages Vol 27, Issue 1, 2020 : (55-69 p.)
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Summary, etc From a commonsense perspective, an outburst of laughter appears to demonstrate little more than a lack of subjective will; it certainly does not register as having political significance. Yet, this is also to render the political in commonsense terms. As the emerging body of literature on the question of the micropolitical suggests, there is, beneath the essentially representational sphere of macropolitics, a micropolitics of affective force. In exploring the political potential of eruptions of laughter, I argue that grasping the novelty of the micropolitical requires that we shift debate away from the scalar questions of large and small, towards the distinction between the ordinary and the singular. Untoward laughter, by protracting the process through which affective force crosses a threshold of perception and becomes remarkable, draws attention to the micropolitics of everyday life. In pursuing this argument, first, I draw on the work of Helmuth Plessner to make a case for the fundamentally ‘undecidable’ nature of laughter: laughter expresses an ‘answer’ to an unanswerable situation. Yet, I argue that Plessner’s phenomenological explanation of laughter is insufficiently sensitive to the micropolitics of bodies, their affective and intensive transformations. Second, then, I draw on Nietzsche’s critique of the sovereignty of subjective will, arguing that the ‘I’ who laughs is merely the dominant drive among a series of conflicting drives. Finally, I draw on Gilles Deleuze’s The Fold, to show that such drives are never ‘mine’. As untoward laughter demonstrates so clearly, the events of the world are always constituted through much more dynamic foldings of material and incorporeal forces.
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Subject corpsing,
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Subject Deleuze,
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Subject humour,
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Subject laughter,
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Subject micropolitics,
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Subject Nietzsche,
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Subject Plessner,
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Subject subjectivity,
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Subject the will
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Host Biblionumber 10528
Host Itemnumber 16510
Place, publisher, and date of publication Sage publisher 2019 -
Title Cultural geographies
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Uniform Resource Identifier https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474019866205
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Koha item type Articles
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