Singing Philosophy: Deviating Voices and Rhythms without a Time Signature

Author:

Voegelin Salomé1

Affiliation:

1. CRiSAP, University of the Arts London , London SE1 6SB , United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract This text practices a philosophical voice that deviates from visuo-centric theory and the muteness of its language and instead sings a complex simultaneity of things and thoughts that burn through the walls of the discipline and illuminate the activities at the margins. This philosophical voice sings a refrain of “I,” which brings us back to bring us forward, surprising us in its renewal again and again. It is a body that is, as Samuel Beckett’s Not I, at once not I and I; an idiosyncratic subjectivity that carries its plural name in its mouth. In this way, it further diffracts the sonic possibility of counterfactual slices into simultaneous dimensionalities open to our gaze in the dark, when we have let go of a normative orientation and are able to see the image at its depth. Between text scores, Churten theory, Canto Cardenche, and the breath of a humpback whale, this voice tries not to theorise. It does not want to produce a philosophical message, supporting a “philosophism” which akin to “scientism” treats philosophy as a phenomenon unconnected to cultural values or location, gender or racial specificity. Instead, it aims to practice a philosophy that opens in song to its own anxiety of objectivity, its fear of a reflective centre, and performs a translucent marginality that generates the view of a plural world burning through a permeable skin.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Philosophy

Reference11 articles.

1. Aikenhead, Glen . “Whose Scientific Knowledge? The Colonizer and the Colonized.” In Science Education as/for Sociopolitical Action, edited by W. M. Roth and J. Desautels , 151–66. NY: Peter Lang International, Academic Publishers, 2002.

2. Ball, Philip . “A World Without Cause and Effect.” Nature 546:29 (June 2017), 590–92.

3. Braidotti, Rosi . Nomadic Theory, The Portable Braidotti. NY: Columbia University Press, 2011.

4. Heidegger, Martin . Sein und Zeit, 11th edition. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1967.

5. Ihde, Don . Listening and Voice, Phenomenologies of Sound, Second edition. NY: University of New York Press, 2007.

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