Thinking Life
A little interview the most interesting part of which is what is not shown: the fact that two guys in their early twenties travel the world in search of people who see life in a different way.
Dionysus, Apollo & the Earth
On the occasion of the publication of Dionysus & Apollo after Nihilism: Rethinking the Earth–World Divide, Susanne Claxton (Southern New Hampshire University), Bronislaw Szerszynski (Lancaster University), Sofya, and Carlos discuss on how recovering Dionysus and Apollo as intertwining conceptual personae can help us to imagine afresh our earthbound condition as well as the creative interplay of life’s primordial forces against the backdrop of contemporary philosophy, butō dance, Anthropocene studies, and an ethics of hospitality and care.
Dionysus, Apollo & the Unthought
On the occasion of the publication of Dionysus & Apollo after Nihilism: Rethinking the Earth–World Divide, Phil Lynes (Durham University), Patrice Maniglier (Paris-Nanterre University), Richard Polt (Xavier University), Jarrad Reddekop (Camosun College), and Carlos discuss on how recovering Dionysus and Apollo as intertwining conceptual personae can contribute to widen the conceptual limits of contemporary philosophy in dialogue with French structuralism and post-structuralism, comparative anthropology, and Heidegger’s late philosophy.
Performance: A Dead Woman Becomes a Bird
The hand is guided by the gaze, the gaze receives what happens and the body experiences it. What happens are transformations, becomings. Trajectories cross the body and appear on the canvas. Two small animals listen to the birds, the sun and the earth.
earthing: emergence
This video, titled “emergence,” is part of a broader project titled “earthing,” which explores the earthly condition of the human body.
Emergence and growth are incomplete events. Life is always in the process of discovering and shaping itself. Similarly, when we dance we listen to, and follow, that process. What, then, is to listen and to look at that which does not yet have a form – and how would the formation of the world look like through the prism of the human body?