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From: Urbanomic [mailto:office@urbanomic.com]
Sent: 22 September 2007 02:53
To: office@???
Subject: COLLAPSE Bulletin 5: Publication of Volume III 'Unknown Deleuze'



Dear Friends,



We are delighted to announce thatCOLLAPSE Volume IIIwill be published in mid-October and is now available for advance purchase online at http://www.urbanomic.com/order.php <http://www.urbanomic.com/order.php>



Collapse Volume III: 'Unknown Deleuze'contains explorations of the work of Gilles Deleuze by pioneering thinkers in the fields of philosophy, aesthetics, music and architecture. In addition, we publish in this volume two previously untranslated texts by Deleuze himself, along with a fascinating piece of vintage science fiction from one of his more obscure influences. Finally, as an annex to Collapse Volume II, we also include a full transcription of the conference on 'Speculative Realism' held in London earlier this year.



Whilst books continue to appear at an alarming rate which claim to put Deleuze's thought 'to work' in diverse areas outside of philosophy, we submit, in this volume, that his philosophical thought itself still remains enigmatic, both in its detail and in its major themes. The contributors to this volume aim to clarify,from a variety of perspectives, Deleuze's contribution to philosophy: in what does his philosophical originality lie; what does he appropriate from other philosophers and how does he transform it? And how can the apparently disparate threads of his work to be 'integrated' what is the precise nature of the constellation of the aesthetic, the conceptual and the political proposed by Gilles Deleuze, and what are the overarching problems in which the numerousphilosophicalconcepts 'signed Deleuze' converge?



The volume includes two newly-translated articles by Gilles Deleuzealong with contributions from Arnaud Villani, Thomas Duzer, Quentin Meillassoux, John Sellars, ?ic Alliez & Jean-Claude Bonne, Haswell & Hecker, Robin Mackay, Mehrdad Iravanian,J.-H. Rosny the Elder, Graham Harman, Iain Hamilton Grant and Ray Brassier.



For anyone wanting to go right to the core of Deleuzian philosophy and to experience the challenge of Deleuze's thought, the articles collected in Collapse IIIwill provide a virtually inexhaustible treasury of insights. As the featured authors shed light on this challenge from different points of view, they produce unexpected points of convergence, providing important resources for a more complete conceptual 'portrait' of Deleuze, and suggesting further lines of thought to be investigated. For anyone looking for an alternative to the emerging orthodoxy seemingly bent on broadcasting an 'image of Deleuzian thought',Collapse IIIprovides a wide-ranging but uniformly rigorous and innovative survey of Gilles Deleuze's thought, and an illustration of the fact that, even if it is already fashionable to evoke a 'post-Deleuzian' era, we have not yet begun to draw the properly philosophical consequences of this thought.



Mathesis, Science and Philosophy, written by a21-year-old Gilles Deleuze, has never before appeared in print in English and is published in Collapsein a new translation. Written as an introduction to a 1946 republication of a 19th-century esoteric philosophical work by Dr Johann Malfatti de Montereggio, this text offers a fascinating glimpse, set in an unexpected context, into the themes of Deleuze's early work, as they emerge, in an already characteristically-dazzling style. Meanwhile, in the brief but illuminating 1981 interview with Arnaud Villani,Answers to a Series of Questions(also appearing here for the first time in English), Deleuze provides some tantalising intimations regarding the enduring concerns of his work over the years.



In his own contribution to the volume, philosopher-poetArnaud Villani (whose 1999The Wasp and the Orchidwas one of the first books to be published in France treating Deleuze's work as a whole) reflects on Deleuze's affirmation that he considered himself a 'pure metaphysician': what, precisely, does metaphysics mean for Deleuze? Through a sophisticated reading utilising the resources of aesthetics, poetics and philosophy, Villani not only defines the object of this metaphysics, but also shows clearly why it cannot be severed from its links with these other realms of thought, or from the question of the political or moral 'decision'.



This allusion reminds us that an examination of Deleuze today would be unthinkable without reference to Alain Badiou's provocativeDeleuze: The Clamor of Being, and in his articleIn Memoriamof Deleuze,Thomas Duzerundertakes, through a survey of the major axes of Deleuze's philosophy, to locate the precise nature of their now famous 'nonrelationship'; his defence emphasises that the positive features of Deleuze's thought cannot be reduced either to a 'phenomenology' or to Badiou's polemical opposite.



In an exclusive translated extract from their new bookMatisse-Thought: Portrait of the Artist as Hyperfauve, philosopher?ic Alliez (former student of Deleuze's and author of The Signature of the World)and art-historianJean-Claude Bonneanalysethe revolution inaugurated in painting by Matisse during hisFauvist period of 1905-6,discovering that the rigorous 'quantitative' conception of the intensive which Matisse proposesallows not only a new understanding of thesignificance of Fauvism for his later work, but also clarifies and reaffirmsthe philosophical pertinence of a Nietzschean-Deleuzian thinking ofintensity and extensity, the qualitative and the quantitative.



On the basis of an examination of a 'fragment' from Deleuze and Guattari's What is Philosophy?,Quentin Meillassoux, in a philosophical tour de force,meticulously reconstructs the nature and the measure of Deleuzian 'immanence', proposing finally a 'subtractive' reading drawing on Bergson's Matter and Memory,allowing us to understand, step-by-step 'from the inside' the construction of thatsingular network of concepts found in Deleuze's work.



Sound artists RussellHaswell and Florian Heckercontribute some strange and beautiful images taken from the electronic 'score' of their new sound work Blackest Ever Black, an 'introduction to synaesthesia' created using composer Iannis Xenakis's computerised UPIC system to transform contemporary images into sound. An accompanying text by Robin Mackay analyses the affinities between Xenakis's conception of a musical 'polyagogy' and Deleuze's 'transcendental empiricism'.



Examining Deleuze's famous use of the supposedly Stoic theory of Chronos and A? in Logic of Sense,John Sellars (author of The Stoicsand The Art of Living)examines just how much it owes to actual stoic theories of time, thus providing both a case-study in the Deleuzian 'ventriloquism' in the history of philosophy and an informative example of the 'stratigraphic' time in which, according to Deleuze, philosophy takes place.



Iranian architect Mehrdad Iravanian constructs a 'graphitext' which, taking as its starting point a page from Deleuze's The Fold, undertakes a non-interpretative 'ex-pli-cation' of its content. Employing a hybrid methodology at onceliteral, textual and architectural, he brings to light structures secreted within the folds of the text itself.



One of the many obscure 'personae' in the background of Deleuze's Difference and Repetition, the mysterious figureJ.-H. Rosny the Eldernot only supplied that work's repeated formula for the nature of intensity-as-difference, but, as both philosopher and pioneering science fiction author, was also a living embodiment of the notion that 'philosophy is a kind of science-fiction': in his astonishing 1895 tale Another World, appearing here in English for the very first time,Rosny evokes an alien world of abstract lifeforms intersecting with our own, and examines with philosophical acuity the process of bringing such unknown beings within the purview of scientific knowledge.



As if all this were not enough ... Following the 'dossier' onSpeculative Realismin the previous volume ofCollapse,Volume III also includes a full transcription of the colloquium of the same name held at Goldsmith's University of London in April 2007 featuring presentations by Ray Brassier, Iain Hamilton Grant, Graham Harman andQuentin Meillassoux on the problems, and the promise, of this renewal of speculative philosophical thought.Running to well over 100 pages, this is an important and exciting document of contemporary philosophy in the making, proposing new conceptual approaches, exploring the borders between science and philosophy, and mining the history of thought for fresh insights into Nature, objectivity, and the legacy of 'correlationism'.



Advance online orders for Volume IIIare priced (including postage)10 (UK) / 13 (Europe) / 16 (Elsewhere).

(Unfortunately a vastly increased page count, together with regular unpredictable postal rate rises, have necessitated an increase in price for this volume.)



***4-Volume subscriptions are also available online at a reduced price.***

Readers will shortly be able to download a preview of the introduction to Volume IIIfrom the website

http://www.urbanomic.com <http://www.urbanomic.com/> /dl.php, where introductions to Vols I and II are already available.



Help us :if you are able to post a notice in your place of work or study, please download and print the flyer forCollapse Volume IIIfromhttp://www.urbanomic.com/dl.php. We would also welcome and reciprocate all links into theUrbanomicwebsite from blogs, etc. Finally, please forward this bulletin on to anyone you know who is not on our mailing list but who may be interested.



COLLAPSE Volume III

October2007.

Paperback 115x175mm 515pp (TBC)

Limited Edition of 1000 numbered copies.

ISBN 0-9553087-2-0



THOMAS DUZER

In Memoriam: Gilles Deleuze 1925-1995

GILLES DELEUZE

Responses to a Series of Questions

ARNAUD VILLANI

'I Feel I Am A Pure Metaphysician': The Consequences of Deleuze's Remark

QUENTIN MEILLASSOUX

Subtraction and Contraction: Deleuze, Immanence and Matter and Memory

HASWELL & HECKER

Blackest Ever Black

GILLES DELEUZE

Mathesis, Science and Philosophy

JOHN SELLARS

The Truth about Chronos and A?

?IC ALLIEZ & JOHN-CLAUDE BONNE

Matisse-Thought and the Strict Ordering of Fauvism

MEHRDAD IRAVANIAN

Unknown Deleuze

J.-H. ROSNY THE ELDER

Another World

RAY BRASSIER, IAIN HAMILTON GRANT, GRAHAM HARMAN, QUENTIN MEILLASSOUX

Speculative Realism







Still Available:

Collapse Volume II 'Speculative Realism'

RAY BRASSIER

The Enigma of Realism

QUENTIN MEILLASSOUX

Potentiality and Virtuality

ROBERTO TROTTA

Dark Matter: Facing the Arche-Fossil (Interview)

GRAHAM HARMAN

On Vicarious Causation

PAUL CHURCHLAND

Demons Get Out! (Interview)

CL?ENTINE DUZER & LAURA GOZLAN

Nevertheless Empire

REZA NEGARESTANI

Islamic Exotericism: Apocalypse in the Wake ofRefractory Impossibility

KRISTEN ALVANSON

Elysian Space in the Middle East



Collapse Volume I 'Numerical Materialism'

ALAIN BADIOU

'Philosophy, Sciences, Mathematics' (Interview)

GREGORY CHAITIN

'Epistemology as Information Theory'

REZA NEGARESTANI

'The Militarization of Peace'

MATTHEW WATKINS

'Prime Evolution(Interview)'

'INCOGNITUM'

'Introduction to ABJAD'

NICK BOSTROM

'Existential Risk (Interview)

THOMAS DUZER

'On the Mathematics of Intensity'

KEITH TILFORD

'Crowds'

NICK LAND

'Qabbala 101'



Back volumes available online at 7 (UK) / 9 (Europe) / 12 (Elsewhere).



COLLAPSE is available in the following fine bookstores: Vrin, Paris; ICA (Institute of Contemporary Arts) bookshop, London; Tate Modern bookshop, London; Gleebooks, Sydney.



yours,



Robin Mackay

(Editor)



http://www.urbanomic.com <http://www.urbanomic.com/>



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