Rok Benčin

Cuts in the »Universal Undulation« | Deleuze, Badiou and the (Anti)Representational Event(s)

Eine Metrostation in goldenes Licht getaucht

Gilles Deleuze claimed that modern thought is “born of the failure of representation”. This failure, however, is not the failure of the act of representation, unable to produce the image of reality. It is reality itself that is constructed according to the principles of representation. The task of a modern philosopher is therefore to trace the events in which the forces at work beneath the representational construction of reality come to the fore. In cinema, this reveals “a world of universal variation, of universal undulation, universal rippling”. Deleuze’s concept of »image-movement« is not merely a philosophical contribution to film theory but also a piece in the great ontological puzzle.

Intriguingly, the other great ontologist among the contemporary French philosophers, Alain Badiou, denies the ontological dimension of cinema: “After all, cinema is nothing but takes and editing.” In the cinematographic image, “movement is held up, suspended, inverted, arrested”. In other words, there is no »universal undulation« escaping the grip of representation, there are only »cuts« in the visible. How, then, does the philosopher of »Being and Event« define the truth of cinema?

This paper will critically explore the ontological stakes in Deleuze’s and Badiou’s thinking of cinema and how a cinematographic event can be defined through the opposition of the real and the representational construction of reality.

Rok Benčin studied philosophy and comparative literature at the University of Ljubljana. He received a PhD in philosophy at the University of Nova Gorica in 2012. Since 2008, he has worked as a researcher at the Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts (ZRC SAZU) and an assistant professor at the Postgraduate School ZRC SAZU. His research focuses on aesthetics and ontology in contemporary philosophy. He recently published the book »Okna brez monad: estetika od Heideggerja do Rancièra« [»Windows without Monads: Aesthetics from Heidegger to Rancière«] (ZRC Publishing House, 2015).