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	<title>Comments on: Deleuze Texts</title>
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		<title>By: mahdi ghorbani</title>
		<link>http://www.continental-philosophy.org/2008/03/28/deleuze-texts/comment-page-1/#comment-49115</link>
		<dc:creator>mahdi ghorbani</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jul 2008 16:15:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>i want all of the books of deleuze.i don&#039;t have any ecard.please help me.thank&#039;s</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>i want all of the books of deleuze.i don&#8217;t have any ecard.please help me.thank&#8217;s</p>
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		<title>By: Deleuze Books Online &#171; Larval Subjects .</title>
		<link>http://www.continental-philosophy.org/2008/03/28/deleuze-texts/comment-page-1/#comment-43503</link>
		<dc:creator>Deleuze Books Online &#171; Larval Subjects .</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Apr 2008 14:31:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.continental-philosophy.org/2008/03/28/deleuze-texts/#comment-43503</guid>
		<description>[...] 7, 2008 Deleuze Books&#160;Online Posted by larvalsubjects under Deleuze, Individuation, Psychoanalysis &#160;  (Via ContinentalPhilosophy) A number of texts on Deleuze and by Deleuze/Deleuze-Guattari are now available online through Fark Yaralari&#8217;s blog. Of special interest to me is Christian Kerslaki&#8217;s Deleuze and the Unconscious. There are so few books delving deeply and in an informed way into Deleuze&#8217;s relationship to psychoanalysis that it is nice to see someone doing such work. I am, however, perplexed to see that Kerslaki focuses so much on Jung. On the one hand, this move seems retrograde as Jung, with his collective unconscious and focus on expressivist &#8220;interpretive keys&#8221; is something of the Plato of psychoanalysis. From one end of his work to the other, Deleuze devoted his thought to overcoming the overdetermination and subordination of matter to form. This is precisely the aim of his intricate analysis of processes of individuation in the last two chapters of Difference and Repetition. Whether we&#8217;re speaking of Platonic Ideas, Kantian categories, Hegelian notions, or Jungian archetypes, the force of this critique of form remains the same. However, perhaps this is just a mistaken understanding of Jung and my view will change after reading Kerslaki&#8217;s book. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] 7, 2008 Deleuze Books&nbsp;Online Posted by larvalsubjects under Deleuze, Individuation, Psychoanalysis &nbsp;  (Via ContinentalPhilosophy) A number of texts on Deleuze and by Deleuze/Deleuze-Guattari are now available online through Fark Yaralari&#8217;s blog. Of special interest to me is Christian Kerslaki&#8217;s Deleuze and the Unconscious. There are so few books delving deeply and in an informed way into Deleuze&#8217;s relationship to psychoanalysis that it is nice to see someone doing such work. I am, however, perplexed to see that Kerslaki focuses so much on Jung. On the one hand, this move seems retrograde as Jung, with his collective unconscious and focus on expressivist &#8220;interpretive keys&#8221; is something of the Plato of psychoanalysis. From one end of his work to the other, Deleuze devoted his thought to overcoming the overdetermination and subordination of matter to form. This is precisely the aim of his intricate analysis of processes of individuation in the last two chapters of Difference and Repetition. Whether we&#8217;re speaking of Platonic Ideas, Kantian categories, Hegelian notions, or Jungian archetypes, the force of this critique of form remains the same. However, perhaps this is just a mistaken understanding of Jung and my view will change after reading Kerslaki&#8217;s book. [...]</p>
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