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Tommie Soro
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 4 มิ.ย. 2013
Discursive Norms and Limits in the Contemporary Artworld
Presented at the European Artistic Research Network in Dublin, October 2018, this video work combines the genres of academic presentation, contemporary art, animation and children's' storybook. Bringing together critical discourse analysis and Pierre Bourdieu's field theory, the video examines the discursive norms and limits regulating the ways that online contemporary art magazines construct artists' reputations.
มุมมอง: 454
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Pierre Bourdieu's Field Theory
มุมมอง 53K6 ปีที่แล้ว
Go to Sections: Capital 0:25 Fields 5:59 Nomos 8:42 Doxa 11:15 Illusio 12:09 Habitus 13:26 The Avant-Garde 20:40 Special Thanks to John O'Flynn, Jenny Spain, Morgan Thunder, and Eileen Banks.
Reputational Discourse in the Field of Contemporary Art
มุมมอง 3877 ปีที่แล้ว
Performance Lecture of the Ph.D. Project 'Reputational Discourse in the Field of Contemporary Art'. Presented at the Research Pavilion of the Venice Biennale 2017 as part of Gradcam's contribution to the event.
Economies of Prestige in Artist Relationships
มุมมอง 1.1K10 ปีที่แล้ว
17 minute presentation of my thesis research.
The People
มุมมอง 28810 ปีที่แล้ว
05/05/2014: Liberation Day. Haarlem, Netherlands. On Street Projection. The video works with edited quotes from Geert Wilders.
A WAKE FOR THE CELTIC TIGER
มุมมอง 47211 ปีที่แล้ว
Public performance highlighting the death of the narrative which has dominated the representation of Ireland's identity nationally and internationally. Pall Bearers Will Kany, Gordon Rose, Colm McGory, Chris Quinn, Robert Hopkins, Tommie Soro. Speakers Conor McCabe, Des Derwin, Stephen Bedford and Richie O'Shea. Musicians Tradrock.
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This video is Gold!!! ty so much
such an awesome video. Thanks. Will make sure to visit your other videos
amazing!
This is a fantastic video, and it is extremely appreciated. This theory is spot on and has been proven to be valid endless times.
Thanks for your support!
Lovely
Very good video. Love that you included Nomos. Seems like a common misunderstanding among many to confuse doxa with nomos.
*THIS* is why I wanted to major in Sociology. So fyi: Stanford is a ripoff.
Thank you! Is Agamben's work only aimed at explanation or has he proposed any ideas about political change?
i dont think thinkers like agamben and michel foucault that coined biopolitics are revolutionalist. So yes they strive more to explain and analyse political discourses
while imo they are certainly grounded in certain traditions on the left this is more of an explanatory thing
Great summary and presentation of a philosopher who’s quite tricky to grip!
This was very interesting, thanks.
Thank you so much for making this. Struggling through this book but in light of our lockdown era its thesis seems more relevant than ever.
An absolutely amazing introduction to market theories of art especially useful when you extend it to the algorithm in marketing.
Excellent.
By far the best Bourdieu video ever!
Thanks for the comment! It is appreciated.
Hey, great video! Made it much easier to understand Agamben than the unstructured slides of my professor :D I have a problem understanding a specific part though: "The state of exception is simply constituted when the sovereign acts beyond the law" and "The implementation of the state of exception is a normal thing that states do" contradict in my mind. If states implement states of exception, e.g. by stripping prisoners of voting rights, then they do not go beyond the law, as this IS the law they implemented. One could argue that this is against human rights, but the civil laws that apply are made by the state itself.
Hi Waffe, thanks for your comment and your question. The way I see it, prisoners, for example, are in a state of exception (e.g. no right ot vote) that has become normalised and legalised, to put it bluntly. A better example would be the Patriot Act, where there was an 'emergency', so the law was changed to allow infringement on rights guaranteed by the US constitution. Another example is Covid vaccine mandates, which is an exercise of biopower, I am not taking a position here on government responses to the Covid crisis but when there is an 'emergency', then laws can be quickly changed or ignored, meaning you have rights, but they are not inalienable. The state of exception is often enacted using the term emergency in contemporary political discourse. One might argue that Russia's invasion of Ukraine was legitimated under the pretence of a state of emergency. That is, Putin claimed Russian separatists were being illegally discriminated against and so 'had to' break some international law to meet his national obligations to them. That's how I think about state of exception. Civil laws are not set in stone, so neither are your rights. Human rights, in general and in particular for Western states, have even less legitimacy. If you check who has been prosecuted in the Hauge, you won't find Westerners (excepting some Serbs). So, in my opinion, national rights are the locus of all legitimate right to violence and human rights are a nice idea but are very difficult to implement because rights are really national by defination (for citizens). That is why refugees and undocumented migrants are in such a tough position. No nation really HAS TO protect them so most don't most of the time. Hope this helps.
thank you so much for this video! really helpful
All this makes very logical sense to me. Thanks for the production.
So he knew about covid vaccination mandates 7 years ago?
The mandates are interesting in that they are certainly biopolitical measures imposed under the banner of a state of exception.
La gente come noi non molla mai
20 people selected the dislike button because it's not what the majority would select.
Solid Tommie, as always.
The fact that so many graduate students need this video to understand Agamben demonstrates how unnecessary the book is. I found the book more relevant to European democracies than American democracies.
.AVANTGUARD.
Disagree slightly with the part about Biology but very good video. Thanks.
Still don’t get it :/
Much much better than those slick Philosophy TH-camrs (you can probably guess who I mean)
Tommie Soro, did you write the text yourself? I have translated it into portuguese for personal use. Thanks.
Hi Andre. Yes, I wrote the text. I'm really glad you made use of it and went to the touble to translate it. Thanks.
Thank you so much for this! I was stumbling through Agamben haphazardly, and your very clear stating of the ways that sacred and sacrifice were linked but separate, made the text suddenly click together for me. Thanks for this explainer!
Your very welcome! Thanks for your comment!
This is great, thank you!
This is a really fantastic summation of Bourdieu's field theory. Thank you so much. At 18:21 you reference Walther 2005, 13 and I s imply cannot find this reference anywhere. Are you able to provide more details on this reference, please? Thanks once again.
Hi Craig. My apologies for the poor referencing. It should say Walther 2014. Here is the paper from which the excert is taken: link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-658-05700-8_2
Covid 19 anyone?
i would like one covid 19 please :|
Very good explanation overall, thank you for the video, keep ti up :!
Thanks!
Thanks, it would be brilliant to see more of these videos Tommie!
Thanks for your comment Burbik. I am eager to make more videos but it is hard to find the time!
Great stuff! I got into Agamben this spring thanks to the jacket of The Kingdom And The Glory catching my eye at my town's main library. On the third reading I actually started to understand something and subsequent readings as well as watching his lectures on TH-cam and reading other texts on the web have really made me think he's the most important philosopher of our times. Social distancing, mandatory face masks, tracking apps on your phone... and probably mandatory vaccinations with some biometric tracking component coming up. His philosophy could not be more timely.
Great animatic philosophy videos. I really need the English subtitle/transcript. How can I get it?
Hey Gerardo. Thanks for your comment. I have posted the transcript in the comment above.
@@tommiesoro6063 thanks for your respond. But I cant find it. Can you send it to my email: ilcardinalem@gmail.com? Thank you so much
@Tommie Sorro Can I please have a transcript too? I'm not much of an audio learner & coronacation is driving me nuts. Thanks! If you can, please email me @ momojubaline@gmail.com
Thanks to you @Tommie I've get the transcript. May God bless you always.
@@gerardomayolla4968 can you sent me one to my Yahoo acct. At wang.jocelyn@yahoo.com & my school acct. jocelynwang@cpp.edu? Thanks!
This helped me clarify my reading for class, thank you so much!
more relevant than ever
I have learnt more in these 8 minutes than I have in three years of college. Thank you.
No wonder employers can’t find good workers
seems v relevant to case of shamima begum www.360lawservices.com/immigration-law-the-case-of-shamima-begum-and-the-new-precedent-it-sets/
Hi Richard, thanks for sharing the link. Yes, the case is a great example of the fragility of citizenship in modern democratic states. It also illustrates the kind of instrumental rationalisations (here, to maintain national security) that are used to justify the dispossession of what most would assume are inalienable rights. The girl was 15 when she made the misguided decision to join the ISIS caliphate. I struggle to see how this is more egregious than the crimes of UK citizens charged with murder, sex offences, or human trafficking every year. The salient difference appears to be that Shamima is conceptualised as a member of a recognisable group that has been identified as a threat to the population. It seems, therefore, that it is not her crimes but the crimes of ISIS that are the real justification for the severity of her punishment. Thanks for your comment.
Thanks a lot for your work !!!
You're very welcome. Thanks for the comment!
i have aquestion. could you please help if possible?
thank you so much, great explanations!
Plz anybody put some subtitles at least for English
Hi JK, I have added a trascript to the video in the comment section.
@@tommiesoro6063 Thank you. But I can't find it 😢
Am I a Homo sacer here? 😭
Sorry JK. TH-cam keeps deleting my comment. I have commented from another account so hopefully the transcript will appear now.
Unfortunately, it seems TH-cam keeps deleting the comment, perhaps because it contains terms which their algorhytms incorrectly code as hatespeech. If you send me your email, I will send you the transcript and then delete the comment containing your email address. That's all I can do for now.
Instead of using the word biopoltical, you're using the word Biology. Why so. Please explain.
Hi, I cannot remember where in the video I talk about biology and do not have time right now to watch the video again but biology relates to biopolitics in a relatively straightforard way. Biology is key to the establishment of biopolitics because it helps to measure and organise human life processes - sex, reproduction, health - for the purposes of controlling the population. That is not to say that biologists are trying to control everyone. Simply that biology is a form of knowledge on the basis of which disciplinary power is exerted on the bodies of citizens, thus allowing for them to be made into particular types of subjects - subjects which are observed, measured, compared, examined, and so on to distinguish between, and thereby create, the normal and abnormal subject. From this norm, the state can decide who should be sustained, sterilised, euthanised, and so on, depending on its interests. Biology is a form of knowledge that provides a basis for disciplinary power over the body - biopolitics. I hope this answers your question.
@@tommiesoro6063 Thank you sir. I'm from India and for students like me, you're a great resource. Thanks again for spending time for my query.
@@AbdulRahman-ir5zn Your very welcome Abdul. Thanks for the question!
this is very interesting, Is there a thesis I can read somewhere?
Hi Jack, thanks for your interest in my work. The thesis is submitted but still has to be defended (viva voce) and everything is on hold with the virus. The first paper from the thesis has been published in the Journal of Social Semiotics. It is titled 'The rules of the game: discursive norms and limits in the field of contemporary art magazines'. If you want to read it but do not have institutional access to journals, let me know and I will send you a draft copy.
great clarifications !
Can you subscribe underlines in english . .?Many people could you understand...thanks a lot anywhere
Agree..
"Tommie Soro"
thanks for clarifying the part about sacred/sacrifice. very helpful. animations were helpful and not distracting
Thanks