Sunday, 18 May 2008
'To Recap' or 'Some Sort Of Overview' Part 1
"Deleuze's first goal is to indicate how the opsign may "open itself" to the time-image. If the opsign is dissociated from the sensori-motor schema - how might one opsign be linked to another? Memory provides a convenient starting point for such an investigation.
Deleuze's treatment of memory images is framed in the terms Bergson uses to analyze the phenomena or recognition and attention. To recognise an object is to revive a past memory of it and note its resemblance to the present object. Such recognition is most often automatic and unconscious, unlike the recognition that occurs when we consciously pay attention to an object and its various characteristics.
Attentive recognition does not differ qualitatively from automatic recognition. In both cases, we summon up a memory-image and project it on to the object. In attentive recognition, the object and each memory-image form a circuit. As we pay closer attention to the object, we summon up memory-images from broader and more distant past contexts, each wider context encompassing the narrower.
Deleuze uses Bergson's analysis of automatic and attentive recognition as a means of approaching opsigns. In attentive recognition, the sensori-motor schema is relaxed. The habitual linkage of memory and perception within action ceases for a moment and a present object forms circuits with memory-images which are then projected onto the object. Similarly, Deleuze argues, in the pure optical situation the sensori-motor schema is suspended, and an object gives rise to a virtual image - often, a memory, a dream, or a thought."
Ronald Bogue, Deleuze On Cinema, pp. 111-114, Routledge 2003 (abridged)
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2 comments:
Vaguely reminiscent of Baudrillard's theorem of the simulacrum - except with signs and not memories. i.e "the simulacrum is never that which conceals the truth--it is the truth which conceals that there is none. The simulacrum is true". The replacement of meaning with the sign has the same ethos of the image and memory?
Typical how all these Parisian layabouts copy each other's work...
I can well imagine that Baudrillard had indeed read some (if not all) of Bergson's work.
Far from the world's authority on 'Simulacra and Simulation' (although I did skim read it once), I'd say that Bergson's 'Ocean of Memory' that 'we participate in' is almost qualitatively identical to Baudrillard's 'hyperreal' (or whatever it was that he called it).
Deleuze (I'm guessing, from your quote) seems to want to be more homogeneous than Baudrillard re: an object/its representation.
Too wishy washy to go for cult status glory. :/
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