Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 31(4): 628 – 644
The interruption: investigating subjectivation and affect
Leila Dawney
Abstract. This paper contributes to current debates concerning affect
and the nonrepresentational subject by introducing the concept of the
interruption as a means of exploring the politics both of experience and of the
feeling body. By thinking about the way in which affect is theorised in
Spinoza’s Ethics alongside a critique of the subject that draws on Foucault, I
position the interruption as an event that elicits a mode of critique that
enables an interrogation of both the sociality of affect and the somatisation
of politics. This paper explores three events that I describe as interruptions,
and demonstrates the utility and scope of such a concept.
Keywords:
Foucault, Spinoza, affect, experience, subjectivity, nonrepresentational
theory, embodiment
The interruption: investigating subjectivation and affect
Leila Dawney
Abstract. This paper contributes to current debates concerning affect
and the nonrepresentational subject by introducing the concept of the
interruption as a means of exploring the politics both of experience and of the
feeling body. By thinking about the way in which affect is theorised in
Spinoza’s Ethics alongside a critique of the subject that draws on Foucault, I
position the interruption as an event that elicits a mode of critique that
enables an interrogation of both the sociality of affect and the somatisation
of politics. This paper explores three events that I describe as interruptions,
and demonstrates the utility and scope of such a concept.
Keywords:
Foucault, Spinoza, affect, experience, subjectivity, nonrepresentational
theory, embodiment