Deviant Gestures: Deleuze’s Communicative Disruption


Shores C. M.

Deleuze and Guattari Studies, vol.18, no.1, pp.10-35, 2024 (AHCI) identifier identifier

  • Publication Type: Article / Article
  • Volume: 18 Issue: 1
  • Publication Date: 2024
  • Doi Number: 10.3366/dlgs.2024.0540
  • Journal Name: Deleuze and Guattari Studies
  • Journal Indexes: Arts and Humanities Citation Index (AHCI), Scopus
  • Page Numbers: pp.10-35
  • Keywords: affective communication, Carmelo Bene, Francis Bacon, Gilles Deleuze, Jerry Lewis
  • Middle East Technical University Affiliated: Yes

Abstract

For Deleuze, the creation and conveyance of meaning requires not a strict fidelity to an original idea, message or image but rather its deformation. The forces causing such disfigurations operate in gesture, vocalisation and text, with one level sometimes disrupting the others. Among them, gesture plays an especially important role, given Deleuze’s attention to bodily experience. He locates it in theatre, painting and cinema, particularly in the works of Carmelo Bene, Francis Bacon and Jerry Lewis. In these cases, instead of conveying a recognisable message, a deformative gesture sends a shock wave that scrambles normal meaning assignments and codings. Yet, although gesture is a main channel for these communication disruptive forces, their origin may lie elsewhere, namely, in a ‘pick-up’ of influences resulting from an inter-affective encounter between heterogeneous bodies.