This book proposes, following Antonin Artaud, an investigation exploring the virtual body, neurology and the brain as fields of contestation, seeking a clearer understanding of Artaud's transformations that ultimately leads into examining the relevance Artaud may have for an adequate theory of the current media environment.
New Media and the Artaud Effect is the only current full-length study of the relation of Artaud’s work to dilemmas of digital art, media and society today. It is also singular in that it combines a far-reaching discussion of the theoretical implications and ramifications of the ‘late’ or ‘final’ Artaud, with a treatment of individual media works, sometimes directly inspired from Artaud’s travails.
Artaud has long been justly regarded as one of the seminal influences in mid- and late-20th century performance and theater: it is argued here that Artaud’s insights are if anything more applicable to digital/post-digital society and the plethora of works that are made possible by it.
Author(s): Jay Murphy
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 220
City: Cham
Acknowledgements
Contents
Chapter 1: Living Hieroglyphs
Hieroglyphic Keys
A Universe and a Theater of Signs
Shedding Light on Hieroglyphic Language: Fenollosa and Pound’s Revolution of the Word
Aby Warburg’s Expressivity without Subject and Eisenstein in Mexico: Hieroglyphs in Motion
Hieroglyphs as Fields of Force: Olson’s Origins
The Originality of Artaud in Twentieth Century Hieroglyphics
Chapter 2: The Power of Capture
Inner/Outer
Cybernetic Totality
Brain Matter
Sorcery Without Sorcerers
Body Without Organs as Substrate of Resistance
Chapter 3: Beyond Hieroglyphics: I
“The Body Is the Self”, or Godard’s Incommensurable
“Impossible” Influence
Where Artaud’s Ghost Seems to Move the Most—Grandrieux’s Cinema of Cruelty
Grandrieux and Sade
Constructing the “New Body”
Chapter 4: Beyond Hieroglyphics: II
Klossowski’s Body Exchange, or Sharon Tate as Hieroglyph
The Body Remixed—Sterlarc
Catastrophe Theory in Gary Hill
“the infinite, this is me”
Schizophrenia as Interactive Cinema
Another ‘Outside’
Chapter 5: Don’t Forget the Virtual
Artaud: The Urge for Destruction
The ‘Virtual’ as Revolutionary Source
Breakdowns
Artistic “Virtualism”
No Guarantees
Whose Groundlessness?
For a New ‘Anti-Psychiatry’
Works Cited
Archives
Bibliography
Filmography/Electronic Installations
Index