The Forces of Reproduction
Testo Junkie, by Paul Préciado
Jan Sawka: The Power of the Not So Powerless
The following lecture was prepared for delivery at the symposium "Jan Sawka: The Artist’s Role in Changing the World" presented by The Paul Robeson Galleries, Gallery Aferro and the Newark Arts Council, Saturday, November 16, 2013, in conjunction with the exhibition at the Gallery Aferro, "Reflections on Everyman: the work ...
Against Social Determinism
On Scrooge and His Art Collection: A Little Xmas Offering
Jonathan Crary’s 24/7: Late Capitalism and the Ends of Sleep
When I was a kid in the 1960s one of the big questions I remember being tossed about was what to do with all of the free time that modern society would afford us. That there would be a virtually unlimited horizon of material abundance and thus leisure, and how ...
A Working Class Hero(ine) is Something to Be.
Eli Zaretsky Interviewed on Jewish Thought and Psychoanalysis
We Are America: Guantánamo, The Aamer Appeal, and the Passion of Andrés Thomas Conteris
“President Obama, stop the tortuuurrre,” bellowed Andrés Thomas Conteris, as a plastic tube snaked through his nose, down his throat, and into his stomach to deliver a bottle of Ensure nutrients to his starved body. Conteris, months into a grueling fast, voluntarily submitted to the nasogastric feeding in front of ...
“All My Life I Have Been a Woman” and Other Excerpts
About language, our society, madness…
Leslie Kaplan read the following excerpts from her plays after she gave the eighth William Phillips lecture on November 6, 2013 at Theresa Lang Student and Community Center/Arnhold Hall of The New School.
all my life I’ve been a woman
a woman
all my life
does that sentence seem
odd to me
...A Ludic Century?
Games, Aesthetics, the twenty-first century
Writing Moves the Sky
“To write is to jump outside the line of the assassins.” – Franz Kafka
First of all I would like to thank the New School, and Edith Kurzweil who invited me to this eighth William Phillips lecture and gave me the opportunity to come to the prestigious New School.
My father Harold Kaplan was a great friend of William Phillips, who published his first short ...