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Fight Club and the World Trade Center: On Metaphor and the Spatio-Temporal (Dis)location of Violence.

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Fight Club and the World Trade Center: On Metaphor and the Spatio-Temporal (Dis)location of Violence. / Palladino, Paolo; Young, Teresa.
In: Journal for Cultural Research, Vol. 7, No. 2, 2003, p. 195-218.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Palladino P, Young T. Fight Club and the World Trade Center: On Metaphor and the Spatio-Temporal (Dis)location of Violence. Journal for Cultural Research. 2003;7(2):195-218. doi: 10.1080/14797580305359

Author

Palladino, Paolo ; Young, Teresa. / Fight Club and the World Trade Center : On Metaphor and the Spatio-Temporal (Dis)location of Violence. In: Journal for Cultural Research. 2003 ; Vol. 7, No. 2. pp. 195-218.

Bibtex

@article{75ee0c121d424e8fa465699d42ee45da,
title = "Fight Club and the World Trade Center: On Metaphor and the Spatio-Temporal (Dis)location of Violence.",
abstract = "In this essay we examine the metaphorical rendition of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, which took place on 11 September 2001, as attacks on {"}civilization.{"} Our principal aim is to understand how it has proven to be as affective as it seems to have been thus far. We do so by turning to film, a medium that is quintessentially metaphorical and whose own affective power rests on the reconfiguration of time and space. More specifically, we do so by turning to David Fincher's Fight Club (1999). In contrast to the textual approach offered by Slavoj iek (2002), we explore how the formal play of different temporal and spatial scales, which would articulate a trenchant critique of alienation, in fact reproduces an understanding of the subject that is deeply complicit with capital. The play of time and space, on which the affective power of the film rests, articulates a rejection of the fundamentally schizophrenic nature of the subject of capital. Our claim is that this exploration of time, space, and political critique illuminates how the elisions of the historical and geo-political that characterize the metaphorical rendition of the attacks on New York and Washington might easily be overlooked. This essay also advances our more general understanding of both the articulation of time and space within the dominant form of metaphorical representation and how this enacts and consolidates a particular politics.",
author = "Paolo Palladino and Teresa Young",
year = "2003",
doi = "10.1080/14797580305359",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "195--218",
journal = "Journal for Cultural Research",
issn = "1479-7585",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fight Club and the World Trade Center

T2 - On Metaphor and the Spatio-Temporal (Dis)location of Violence.

AU - Palladino, Paolo

AU - Young, Teresa

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - In this essay we examine the metaphorical rendition of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, which took place on 11 September 2001, as attacks on "civilization." Our principal aim is to understand how it has proven to be as affective as it seems to have been thus far. We do so by turning to film, a medium that is quintessentially metaphorical and whose own affective power rests on the reconfiguration of time and space. More specifically, we do so by turning to David Fincher's Fight Club (1999). In contrast to the textual approach offered by Slavoj iek (2002), we explore how the formal play of different temporal and spatial scales, which would articulate a trenchant critique of alienation, in fact reproduces an understanding of the subject that is deeply complicit with capital. The play of time and space, on which the affective power of the film rests, articulates a rejection of the fundamentally schizophrenic nature of the subject of capital. Our claim is that this exploration of time, space, and political critique illuminates how the elisions of the historical and geo-political that characterize the metaphorical rendition of the attacks on New York and Washington might easily be overlooked. This essay also advances our more general understanding of both the articulation of time and space within the dominant form of metaphorical representation and how this enacts and consolidates a particular politics.

AB - In this essay we examine the metaphorical rendition of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, which took place on 11 September 2001, as attacks on "civilization." Our principal aim is to understand how it has proven to be as affective as it seems to have been thus far. We do so by turning to film, a medium that is quintessentially metaphorical and whose own affective power rests on the reconfiguration of time and space. More specifically, we do so by turning to David Fincher's Fight Club (1999). In contrast to the textual approach offered by Slavoj iek (2002), we explore how the formal play of different temporal and spatial scales, which would articulate a trenchant critique of alienation, in fact reproduces an understanding of the subject that is deeply complicit with capital. The play of time and space, on which the affective power of the film rests, articulates a rejection of the fundamentally schizophrenic nature of the subject of capital. Our claim is that this exploration of time, space, and political critique illuminates how the elisions of the historical and geo-political that characterize the metaphorical rendition of the attacks on New York and Washington might easily be overlooked. This essay also advances our more general understanding of both the articulation of time and space within the dominant form of metaphorical representation and how this enacts and consolidates a particular politics.

U2 - 10.1080/14797580305359

DO - 10.1080/14797580305359

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 195

EP - 218

JO - Journal for Cultural Research

JF - Journal for Cultural Research

SN - 1479-7585

IS - 2

ER -