Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Trento, Francisco Beltrame
Data de Publicação: 2017
Tipo de documento: Tese
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da PUC_SP
Texto Completo: https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/20677
Resumo: Contemporaneity is characterized by the interweaving of human beings with multiple media forms, through material mediatic objects (our black mirrors). Also by stimuli and incorporeal enunciates that are embodied by them, or in which they momentarily crystallize themselves. These dispositives and networks have been represented in the audiovisual field, scenic arts, performance and literature frequently. The television anthology Black Mirror (Channel Four, 2011-2014; Netflix, 2016-), one of the fictional guides in our analysis, is a set of narratives that, exacerbating this state of things, discusses how those media ecosystems are intrinsically linked with the production of desires in the individuals. We aim to identify and map those modulations through a Spinozist semiotic of affects. Among the affects, we have identified the production of a desire to control, a mode of existence or set of ideas that presupposes that we have the total control of situations and absolute truth through the same media dispositives that involves us. We relate that to the production of subjectivity of the standard ideal neurotypical human being, or of the fine products that emerges from the processes of the antropotecnical eugenic machine, studied by Fabian Ludueña. Starting from this point, we aim to focus the communication processes as agencements or encounters (occursus). Following Black Mirror’s narrative, we seek to produce a mediatic cartography of good and bad encounters, not constructed through moral systems, but following Spinoza’s ethical evaluation, mapping composition and decompositions, increases and decreases of potency observing the semiotical production of desires through affections. Besides the desire to control, which emerged from the anthropocentric and anthropotechnical crusade, other types of desires can be machined in the subjectivities engaged to the omnipresent media dispositives as part of the contemporaneous capitalist system, as the desire of emulation or the desire of imitation, explained in Spinoza's “definition of affects”. The difficult task is to think escapes or lines of flight to these types of media agencements that can emerge performatively/artistically by experimenting with the same media materialities or enunciative apparatuses (we don’t consider them neither good or evil but they can be (re) allocated in agencements that produce good or bad encounters in a field of immanence). It requires to look for the production of good encounters and active agency, or to think new possibilities of world construction. We consider that, in the presence of the exhaustion produced by the control systems, minor and apparently contingent gestures and artistic practices can resist to the total control and normativity. It’s through them that we advocate in favor of an immanent critique of media, incongruent to identitarian bubbles and politics – that usually target moral judgement without observing events’ causality network and the desires agenced in its nodes. Against that, we ally with the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze, Catherine Malabou and other contemporary rereadings of the Dutch philosopher that can relate with them, as the work of Brian Massumi. To discuss the emergent issues of those complex questions, and try to develop an immanent media critique, Brian Massumi and Erin Manning bring us their particular interpretations of immanent critique, performed through research-creation art practices and minor/disruptive gestures
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spelling Santos, Rogerio da Costahttp://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K4437461Z4Trento, Francisco Beltrame2017-12-15T11:36:16Z2017-12-06Trento, Francisco Beltrame. Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação. 2017. 184 f. Tese (Doutorado em Comunicação e Semiótica) - Programa de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Comunicação e Semiótica, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2017.https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/20677Contemporaneity is characterized by the interweaving of human beings with multiple media forms, through material mediatic objects (our black mirrors). Also by stimuli and incorporeal enunciates that are embodied by them, or in which they momentarily crystallize themselves. These dispositives and networks have been represented in the audiovisual field, scenic arts, performance and literature frequently. The television anthology Black Mirror (Channel Four, 2011-2014; Netflix, 2016-), one of the fictional guides in our analysis, is a set of narratives that, exacerbating this state of things, discusses how those media ecosystems are intrinsically linked with the production of desires in the individuals. We aim to identify and map those modulations through a Spinozist semiotic of affects. Among the affects, we have identified the production of a desire to control, a mode of existence or set of ideas that presupposes that we have the total control of situations and absolute truth through the same media dispositives that involves us. We relate that to the production of subjectivity of the standard ideal neurotypical human being, or of the fine products that emerges from the processes of the antropotecnical eugenic machine, studied by Fabian Ludueña. Starting from this point, we aim to focus the communication processes as agencements or encounters (occursus). Following Black Mirror’s narrative, we seek to produce a mediatic cartography of good and bad encounters, not constructed through moral systems, but following Spinoza’s ethical evaluation, mapping composition and decompositions, increases and decreases of potency observing the semiotical production of desires through affections. Besides the desire to control, which emerged from the anthropocentric and anthropotechnical crusade, other types of desires can be machined in the subjectivities engaged to the omnipresent media dispositives as part of the contemporaneous capitalist system, as the desire of emulation or the desire of imitation, explained in Spinoza's “definition of affects”. The difficult task is to think escapes or lines of flight to these types of media agencements that can emerge performatively/artistically by experimenting with the same media materialities or enunciative apparatuses (we don’t consider them neither good or evil but they can be (re) allocated in agencements that produce good or bad encounters in a field of immanence). It requires to look for the production of good encounters and active agency, or to think new possibilities of world construction. We consider that, in the presence of the exhaustion produced by the control systems, minor and apparently contingent gestures and artistic practices can resist to the total control and normativity. It’s through them that we advocate in favor of an immanent critique of media, incongruent to identitarian bubbles and politics – that usually target moral judgement without observing events’ causality network and the desires agenced in its nodes. Against that, we ally with the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze, Catherine Malabou and other contemporary rereadings of the Dutch philosopher that can relate with them, as the work of Brian Massumi. To discuss the emergent issues of those complex questions, and try to develop an immanent media critique, Brian Massumi and Erin Manning bring us their particular interpretations of immanent critique, performed through research-creation art practices and minor/disruptive gesturesO cerceamento dos seres humanos por múltiplas formas de mídia, ou por meio dos objetos midiáticos materiais (nossos espelhos negros), ou dos estímulos e enunciados incorporais que deles derivam, ou que neles se cristalizam momentaneamente, tem sido discutido no campo audiovisual (cinema e televisão), nas artes cênicas, em performances e na literatura. A antologia televisiva Black Mirror (Channel Four, 2011-2014; Netflix, 2016-), um dos guias ficcionais de nossas análises, é um dos conjuntos de narrativas que, extremando essa possibilidade, mostra como esses novos ecossistemas e agenciamentos midiáticos modulam de distintas formas a produção de desejo nos indivíduos. Um de nossos objetivos é observar e cartografar tais novas modulações de desejo e afetos. Dentre elas, detectamos a produção de um desejo de controle, um modo de ser ou um conjunto de ideias de que temos o controle das situações por meio dos mesmos dispositivos midiáticos que nos envolvem. Procuramos enfocar a comunicação como agenciamento ou encontro (occursus). Por meio da narrativa de Black Mirror, buscamos produzir e identificar uma cartografia de bons e maus encontros, não mediante uma moral, mas sim, a partir da diferenciação entre os dois conceitos de acordo com a Ética, de Spinoza. Além do desejo de controle, outros tipos de desejos são maquinados nas subjetividades acopladas aos media onipresentes e suas inserções no capitalismo contemporâneo, como o desejo de emulação ou o desejo de imitação. A difícil tarefa é pensar os foras a esses tipos de agenciamentos midiáticos de controle, a partir das próprias ferramentas midiáticas maquínicas ou enunciativas, discutindo novas possibilidades de construção de mundos e possíveis. Diante da exaustão, os gestos disruptores e aparentemente contingentes resistem ao controle e à normatização. É por meio deles que buscamos advogar a favor de uma crítica imanente das mídias, que pretende não se adequar às bolhas e políticas identitárias discursivizadas nas mídias, visando a vigilância e o julgamento moral sem observar sua causalidade a partir de uma avaliação ética. Para pensar a comunicação como agenciamento ou encontro, bem como as particularidades dos desejos que se agenciam nessas redes, nos aliamos à filosofia de Baruch Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze, e a algumas leituras contemporâneas que com ela se relacionam, como as feitas por Brian Massumi e Catherine Malabou. Para discutir essa problemática e pensar uma crítica midiática imanente que não retroalimente o ideário de controle, Brian Massumi e Erin Manning, com suas versões do conceito de crítica imanente, auxiliam-nos nessa questãoConselho Nacional de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico - CNPqapplication/pdfhttp://tede2.pucsp.br/tede/retrieve/44230/Francisco%20Beltrame%20Trento.pdf.jpgporPontifícia Universidade Católica de São PauloPrograma de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Comunicação e SemióticaPUC-SPBrasilFaculdade de Filosofia, Comunicação, Letras e ArtesDesejo - Aspectos sociaisComunicação de massa - InfluênciaEspelhos negrosDesire - Social aspectsMass media - InfluenceBlack mirrorCNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::COMUNICACAOEspelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicaçãoinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da PUC_SPinstname:Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC-SP)instacron:PUC_SPTEXTFrancisco Beltrame Trento.pdf.txtFrancisco Beltrame Trento.pdf.txtExtracted texttext/plain473959https://repositorio.pucsp.br/xmlui/bitstream/handle/20677/4/Francisco%20Beltrame%20Trento.pdf.txtdaef17e08655825f68126dc2aeea919bMD54LICENSElicense.txtlicense.txttext/plain; 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dc.title.por.fl_str_mv Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
title Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
spellingShingle Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
Trento, Francisco Beltrame
Desejo - Aspectos sociais
Comunicação de massa - Influência
Espelhos negros
Desire - Social aspects
Mass media - Influence
Black mirror
CNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::COMUNICACAO
title_short Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
title_full Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
title_fullStr Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
title_full_unstemmed Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
title_sort Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação
author Trento, Francisco Beltrame
author_facet Trento, Francisco Beltrame
author_role author
dc.contributor.advisor1.fl_str_mv Santos, Rogerio da Costa
dc.contributor.authorLattes.fl_str_mv http://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K4437461Z4
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Trento, Francisco Beltrame
contributor_str_mv Santos, Rogerio da Costa
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Desejo - Aspectos sociais
Comunicação de massa - Influência
Espelhos negros
topic Desejo - Aspectos sociais
Comunicação de massa - Influência
Espelhos negros
Desire - Social aspects
Mass media - Influence
Black mirror
CNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::COMUNICACAO
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Desire - Social aspects
Mass media - Influence
Black mirror
dc.subject.cnpq.fl_str_mv CNPQ::CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS::COMUNICACAO
description Contemporaneity is characterized by the interweaving of human beings with multiple media forms, through material mediatic objects (our black mirrors). Also by stimuli and incorporeal enunciates that are embodied by them, or in which they momentarily crystallize themselves. These dispositives and networks have been represented in the audiovisual field, scenic arts, performance and literature frequently. The television anthology Black Mirror (Channel Four, 2011-2014; Netflix, 2016-), one of the fictional guides in our analysis, is a set of narratives that, exacerbating this state of things, discusses how those media ecosystems are intrinsically linked with the production of desires in the individuals. We aim to identify and map those modulations through a Spinozist semiotic of affects. Among the affects, we have identified the production of a desire to control, a mode of existence or set of ideas that presupposes that we have the total control of situations and absolute truth through the same media dispositives that involves us. We relate that to the production of subjectivity of the standard ideal neurotypical human being, or of the fine products that emerges from the processes of the antropotecnical eugenic machine, studied by Fabian Ludueña. Starting from this point, we aim to focus the communication processes as agencements or encounters (occursus). Following Black Mirror’s narrative, we seek to produce a mediatic cartography of good and bad encounters, not constructed through moral systems, but following Spinoza’s ethical evaluation, mapping composition and decompositions, increases and decreases of potency observing the semiotical production of desires through affections. Besides the desire to control, which emerged from the anthropocentric and anthropotechnical crusade, other types of desires can be machined in the subjectivities engaged to the omnipresent media dispositives as part of the contemporaneous capitalist system, as the desire of emulation or the desire of imitation, explained in Spinoza's “definition of affects”. The difficult task is to think escapes or lines of flight to these types of media agencements that can emerge performatively/artistically by experimenting with the same media materialities or enunciative apparatuses (we don’t consider them neither good or evil but they can be (re) allocated in agencements that produce good or bad encounters in a field of immanence). It requires to look for the production of good encounters and active agency, or to think new possibilities of world construction. We consider that, in the presence of the exhaustion produced by the control systems, minor and apparently contingent gestures and artistic practices can resist to the total control and normativity. It’s through them that we advocate in favor of an immanent critique of media, incongruent to identitarian bubbles and politics – that usually target moral judgement without observing events’ causality network and the desires agenced in its nodes. Against that, we ally with the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze, Catherine Malabou and other contemporary rereadings of the Dutch philosopher that can relate with them, as the work of Brian Massumi. To discuss the emergent issues of those complex questions, and try to develop an immanent media critique, Brian Massumi and Erin Manning bring us their particular interpretations of immanent critique, performed through research-creation art practices and minor/disruptive gestures
publishDate 2017
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2017-12-15T11:36:16Z
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2017-12-06
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dc.identifier.citation.fl_str_mv Trento, Francisco Beltrame. Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação. 2017. 184 f. Tese (Doutorado em Comunicação e Semiótica) - Programa de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Comunicação e Semiótica, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2017.
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/20677
identifier_str_mv Trento, Francisco Beltrame. Espelhos negros: mutações do desejo e da crítica na comunicação. 2017. 184 f. Tese (Doutorado em Comunicação e Semiótica) - Programa de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Comunicação e Semiótica, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2017.
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