Dormancy: Notes on Sleep, Criticality, and the Poetics of Suspension in and around Henriette Heise’s Darkness Machines (original) (raw)

The Unknown Quantity: Sleep as a Trope in Sloterdijk's Anthropotechnics

Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities 26:1, 2021

This essay explores the trope of sleep in Peter Sloterdijk’s philosophy of anthropotechnics. Sleep is shown to be important for our understanding of Sloterdijk’s project as an index of his subject’s larger, hidden complex of inertias, habits, and corporeal requirements and processes that dominate subjective life and that exist outside the mastery of ego and consciousness. The essay explores this thesis by considering a series of figures that appear in Sloterdijk’s writings and interviews: the philosopher Heraclitus with his dismissive remarks on sleep, the insomniac Emil Cioran, the sleepwalker in Romantic thought. As the essay develops, it shows how, given such a subject formation, anthropotechnics is properly conceived as a management of the subject’s automatic processes to trick or repurpose or redirect them to work in concert or coincidence with the anthropotechnical project, rather than against it.

Poetic Objects: Bachelardian Reverie, Reverberation and Repose in Claire Denis' 35 Shots of Rum

Film-Philosophy , 2023

This article draws on the interrelated concepts of reverie and repose in Gaston Bachelard's philosophy to approach Claire Denis' poetic foregrounding of objects in 35 Shots of Rum (35 Rhums, 2008). Connecting Bachelard's work on time to his later studies of the imagination, I demonstrate how the poetic time of reverie and repose are essential to Bachelard's thinking. Focusing on three especially charged objects (trains, rice cookers and lanterns), I argue for reverie and repose as being embedded into the rhythmic structure, affective organisation and form of Denis' film. Contextualising Bachelard's later thinking in relation to Eugène Minkowski, I maintain that Denis' objects reverberate (both formally and sensuously). In 35 Shots of Rum, Denis' poetic objects and her evocation of different in-between states parallels Bachelard's own materialist thinking on the imagination, reverie and repose.

The Sleeping Nymph Revisited. Ekphrasis, Genius Loci and Silence, (Intersections. Interdisciplinary Studies in Early Modern Culture, 54), eds. Karl Enenkel & Anita Traninger, Leiden, 2018, p. 149-176.

By the end of the fifteenth century, Michael Fabricius Ferrarinus (died sometime between 1488 and 1493), prior of the Carmelite cloister in Reggio Emilia, had launched in his Chronicle (ca. 1477–1484) the rumour that ‘super ripam Danuvii’ a fountain had been found with an ancient sculpture of a sleeping nymph. According to Ferrarinus, the ensemble bore a peculiar tetrastichon epigraph: HUIUS NYMPHA LOCI, SACRI CUSTODIA FONTIS, DORMIO, DUM BLANDAE SENTIO MURMUR AQUAE. PARCE MEUM, QUISQUIS TANGIS CAUA MARMORA, SOMNUM RUMPERE. SIVE BIBAS SIVE LAVERE TACE. Otto Kurz, Millard Meiss, Michael Liebmann, Leonard Barkan, Zita Ágota Pataki, Franz Matsche, and Matthias Müller have all discussed the impact of this rumour as prototypical for the Renaissance sculptures of the sleeping nymph in Rome and for the development of the well-known genre of the sleeping Venus in painting. Building on their work, this essay contextualises the phenomenon of the sleeping nymph and its textual and artistic Nachleben from the point of view of the locus amoenus as silence. Combining an iconological, an aesthetic-philosophical and an anthropological approach, this essay contributes to a better understanding of sleep, voyeurism, and silence within the context of the nymph’s particular genius loci.

Baudelaire's “Dark Zone”: The Poème en Prose As Social Hieroglyph; or The Beginning and the End of Commodity Aesthetics

Modernist Cultures, 2009

Lyric poetry collides with the prose of history in Baudelaire's Petits poèmes en prose (1869), one of modernité's inaugural aesthetic projects. While the “prose poem” persists today with its own canons, anthologies, and journals, Baudelaire's poème en prose remains irreducible to the genre it is typically said to have originated. This essay makes a case for the generic singularity of Baudelaire's poème en prose by way of Paul de Man and Theodor Adorno, whose oblique references to Baudelaire's innovation are rich in unexamined implications, implications which illuminate the work of both theorists as much as they help us to understand the stakes of Baudelaire's prosaic experiment. The essay goes on to argue that modern lyric's rarefied aim for an autonomy beyond language's referential function persists critically, albeit paradoxically, in the seeming transparency of the Petits poèmes en prose, where poem and commodity collapse in an internal identificat...

Filippo Brunelleschi and the Perspectives of Sleep in the Novella of Thefatwoodcarver

2003

A fundamental characteristic of the Florentine figurative tradition at the beginning of the fifteenth century — a characteristic which emerges, for instance, from Filippo Brunelleschi's perspective panels or from Lorenzo Ghiberti's concept of measures of the eye — is that it considers the work of art as a scientific exposition of the master's vision, an exposition which can be confirmed by its principles of measurability and hence by its implic-