Thursday, January 10, 2013

John Mullarkey : The Photography of Philosophy

in|discussion
public lecture series 2013

John Mullarkey
The Photography of Philosophy

6pm Wednesday, 30th January
Lecture Room G6, School of Art Design and Printing
Dublin Institute of Technology, 41 Mountjoy Square, Dublin 1


Franois Laruelles concept of non-standard philosophy is said to expand the definition of what counts as philosophical thought. However, this gesture goes beyond merely relativizing thought within a neo-liberal pluralism that is actually indifferent to philosophy (all opinions are valid) or anarchizing science as part of a methodology where anything goes. Rather, the flat thought Laruelle strives for is democratic because it is materialized in different ways, some of them scientific (quantum physics, fractal geometry), some of them aesthetic (cinema, photography). The non-standard philosophy of photography, for instance, is not simply the generation of new thoughts (about appearances, subjectivity, light, etc) through an unorthodox source, but the materialization of all thought through a photography of philosophy. In this talk, I want to explore such a photography of philosophy as a non-philosophical practice, especially in terms of the materiality of photographic practice as it involves posture, figure/ground, definition, and resolution  not as mere metaphors, but as already actualised mutations of what counts as philosophical practice.

John Mullarkey is Professor of Film and Television Studies at Kingston University, London. He has also taught philosophy and film theory at the University of Sunderland, England (1994-2004) and the University of Dundee, Scotland (2004 to 2010). He has published Bergson and Philosophy (1999), Post-Continental Philosophy: An Outline (2006), Philosophy and the Moving Image: Refractions of Reality (2010), and co-edited Laruelle and Non-Philosophy (2012) and The Bloomsbury Companion to Continental Philosophy (2013). He is an editor of the journal Film-Philosophy, and chair of the Society for European Philosophy. His work explores variations of 'non-standard-philosophy', arguing that philosophy is a subject that continually shifts its identity through engaging with supposedly non-philosophical fields such as film theory and animal studies (the realm of 'outsider thought' with which he is most acquainted). He is currently working on a book entitled Reverse Mutations: Laruelle and Nonhuman Philosophy.

All are welcome to this free event, but places are limited.
Please book by email: indiscussionadp@gmail.com

in|discussion ?This public lecture series is a forum to discuss contemporary issues and current research in typography, art, design, material culture, critical theory, pedagogy, philosophy, society and technology. The series follows the launch of the BA in Visual and Critical Studies at the School of Art Design and Printing DIT: http://bavacs.blogspot.com/

Updates on the lecture series at:
http://www.dit.ie/artdesignprinting/

We look forward to seeing you there.

Dr Tim Stott, Assistant Lecturer in Art History and Theory. Tel: 00 353 (0)1 402 4129

Brian Fay, Lecturer in Fine Art. Tel: 00 353 (0) 1 402 3559

Brenda Duggan, Lecturer in Visual Communication. Tel: 00 353 (0) 1 4024237

DIT, School of Art, Design & Printing, Dublin Institute of Technology,
41 Mountjoy Square, Dublin 1.


Brian Fay
Lecturer in Fine Art
DIT Portland Row
St Josephs Convent
Dublin 1
Ireland
Email - brian.fay@dit.ie
Tel - 00 353 1 4023559
www.brianfayartist.com