Deleuze & Guattari: Anti-Oedipus on Schizoanalysis versus Capitalism

This is the longest Plastic Pills video to date, and it'll take some mental stamina to get through it. That said, this is one of my favourite books, to which I have often alluded, and I hope my rendition does it justice.
The EXPLAIN DELEUZE TO ME playlist: • Deleuze by Plastic Pills
There are a few targets here: psychoanalysis (more establishment analysts than Lacan, though they refer to him as well), capitalism, the state, and state philosophy. IMO, I think it is productively read as a political text.
There will be a more in-depth explainer vid up on my Patreon to deal with their relation to Lacan and what they mean by "capitalism" ( / plasticpills ) and also explaining my presentation decisions, once I recover.
Sources referenced or quoted:
Anti-Oedipus (D&G): amzn.to/3o2ksAw
A Thousand Plateaus (D&G): amzn.to/32UPeQa
Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature (D&G): amzn.to/359OBFw
Desert Islands (Gilles Deleuze): amzn.to/3470gpb
Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (Schreber): amzn.to/37icKw9
Our podcast: open.spotify.com/show/42WcZyq...

Пікірлер: 704

  • @PlasticPills
    @PlasticPills3 жыл бұрын

  • @MarcillaSmith

    @MarcillaSmith

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for such high quality content, as usual. This is an older way of thinking, but it was that the mental state was considered more along a linear continuum with schizophrenia at one end - where the mental boundaries of the neurotypical would be transgressed fluidly - and neuroticism - with its paralyzing, rigid conformity - at the other. In that sense, the schizophrenic mindset does represent polar opposition to rigid conformity (conservation of the status quo). I have some concern. To begin, D&G did not have access to more recent studies that correlate hallucinations with trauma to the brain stem (neuroticism - as a disturbance in more abstract thinking - would tend more towards trauma to the cortical region). Reconsidered in this context, I'm not sure I'm so ready to accept that mimicking the thought patterns of someone with trauma to the most fundamental part of their thinking machine is such a brilliant idea. Would I attempt to "outpace" the state (or her agents) in a physical sense by mimicking the gait of someone with a sprained ankle? That isn't to say that neuroticism or even neurotypical thinking is "the answer." To the contrary, the systems of exploitation want us to avoid any of the creative thinking of the schizophrenic as well as the overthinking of the neurotic, focused instead on the thoughts they spoon feed us. I think I would prefer to draw inspiration from ALL the different ways my brain can think. If I may add another concern, it's that "intentional schizophrenic thinking" sounds like the sort of thing that could very easily think of itself as transgressing boundaries, when it may end up doing it in a manner which still confines it to the predictable. Look at this guy, drinking out of cups! No way! Yes, a sudden interruption in the flow of my writing, but is it schizophrenic if my mind immediately goes to what I've been conditioned through media to think of as schizophrenic? In conclusion, I'm sure John MacAfee would agree, how many people do we need raising money for cancer when literally everyone I've ever known has been touched by it, and here's a rocket ship shooting a laser: 8======D~~~~

  • @sawtoothiandi

    @sawtoothiandi

    3 жыл бұрын

    just watched this, again, lightly baked, and it makes sense now. lol. realised by accident ie organically ive been being deleuzian all these years...weirding it up instinctively

  • @sawtoothiandi

    @sawtoothiandi

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Striated Flows of Global Techno, Rhythm and Sound, For the Healing Of The Nation - a poem

  • @sawtoothiandi

    @sawtoothiandi

    3 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/lmhmu6ukk7XbfMY.html

  • @sawtoothiandi

    @sawtoothiandi

    3 жыл бұрын

    Aural deviation from the norm is prerequisite to proliferating pastures amenable to shrooms and blessed weeds

  • @uncanalmenor
    @uncanalmenor3 жыл бұрын

    Back in college we used to refer to Deleuze and Guattari exclusively as Dolce and Gabbana. ❤️👴

  • @derekmartin1858

    @derekmartin1858

    Жыл бұрын

    Why is this? I'd like to understand the reference

  • @zicokahuroa3660

    @zicokahuroa3660

    Жыл бұрын

    @@derekmartin1858 Deleuze & Gutarri D&G Dolce&Gabanna

  • @JeffRebornNow

    @JeffRebornNow

    4 ай бұрын

    @@derekmartin1858 What better to represent how capitalism shapes desire than a fashion house? Useless ephemeral trinkets that people "want."

  • @hunterjefferson3206
    @hunterjefferson32063 жыл бұрын

    I literally just finished Anti-Oedipus yesterday morning and started A Thousand Plateaus today. I've never dealt with a more difficult set of books and it definitely doesn't help if you're not acquainted with psychoanalysis, the history of continental philosophic thought, or some major European literature. My psyche feels incredibly schizo after all of this lol

  • @sk8shred

    @sk8shred

    3 жыл бұрын

    How did you do it? Any tips on how to understand it? I'm familiar with analytic philosophy and had a science education, but D&G are a total different animal. I find it very hard to jump into it.

  • @hunterjefferson3206

    @hunterjefferson3206

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@sk8shred So, I needed a deadline so I made myself plan on finishing it in a month. From there I tried to do 20 pages a day, and I used a black pen and yellow highlighter - I HIGHLY recommend this because you want to notate the book so you won’t have to read it from start to finish again without some kind of system. Next, I’d say read it straight through, and don’t get too hung up on a paragraph or a page, they will usually clarify it later to a certain degree. Also, google the words you don’t know and depending on what the term is, there will be useful resources online to figure it out. Along with that, there are going to be times when they name bomb a lot, I don’t recommend looking up ever individual, rather, see what they’re saying about that individual. I also recommend Daniel W. Smiths lectures (apple podcasts under an “Interregnum” cast that use to exist) bc he’s really really helpful on it. You can also find another one on there where a reading group has gone through chapter by chapter and that helped out some too bc a lot of the beginning stuff is the hardest. Beyond that, I can just say go with god and just try to crank through it

  • @shayneoneill1506

    @shayneoneill1506

    2 жыл бұрын

    for what its worth I know guys with PhD qualificatons in friggin Heidegger, himself a pretty mystifying writer, and can Derria in their sleep, who crash on the rocks of D&G unable to figure out wtf these mad frenchmen are on about. This stuff is hard and its no moral fault to be bamboozled by it. I sure am! But its also ok to just take away what you feel you need out of it and ignore the rest. D&G explicitely state as much as that.

  • @comu157

    @comu157

    2 жыл бұрын

    The thing withe Anti-Oedipus (the first philosophy book I've read in it's entirety) is that it operates schizoanalysis throught itself. I too found myself quite schizo after reading it. It absolutely changes ones conscience since it operates the decoding and recoding operation described in the book. The main things one needs to look for in the process of understanding the book is psychoanalysis, linguistics (specially semiology) and a bit of logic and history/anthropology. The thing is to read intuitively, taking notes whenever you catches some ideas flying around, and then revisiting the book after it cools down on you.

  • @bored4161

    @bored4161

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hunterjefferson3206 I followed ur advice and it worked great but the library is hella mad

  • @matth464
    @matth4643 жыл бұрын

    Damn Pills...I think this is your best video to date. I can tell how much effort and time you put into this. Top notch bro. You should be proud!

  • @euckb

    @euckb

    2 жыл бұрын

    very well rounded and connected. ;)

  • @friskcharaandnari2415
    @friskcharaandnari24153 жыл бұрын

    This is probably the most sense Deleuze ever made! Danke!

  • @cudi313

    @cudi313

    3 жыл бұрын

    I was falling asleep until it got to the schizoanalysis part. So fascinating.

  • @HS-bh9dz

    @HS-bh9dz

    3 жыл бұрын

    and Guattari*

  • @mikeeb88

    @mikeeb88

    3 жыл бұрын

    My thoughts exactly. I've tried to explain this theory to people (even though I only half understand it) and it makes less sense the more words come out my mouth. Props to PlasticPills for making the most inaccessible theory digestible by dummies like me!

  • @bojackhorsie4341

    @bojackhorsie4341

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's really hard to understand esp. for those without in depth background on such topics, but okay.

  • @seditoable

    @seditoable

    3 жыл бұрын

    Deleuze himself is usually very readable, diff and rep is kinda hard though

  • @leandrohumanidades
    @leandrohumanidades3 жыл бұрын

    00:00 - Introduction 06:31 - The politics of capitalist realism 11:05 - Delirium & schizophrenia 13:14 - Schizoanalysis 25:29 - Native Tongues Collective Here it is! To all Dolce & Gabbana readers

  • @CezarPrado

    @CezarPrado

    3 жыл бұрын

    Vc por aqui, meu caro! Valeu aí pelas divisões! rsrs

  • @thomashugentoblerschlickmann

    @thomashugentoblerschlickmann

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@CezarPrado mds, como q tamo em td q é lugar? Br é mt schizo kkkkkkk

  • @CezarPrado

    @CezarPrado

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@thomashugentoblerschlickmann Vi esse teu comentário assim que terminei de ler uma parte do capítulo 3 do Anti-Édipo kkkk

  • @MMAneuver
    @MMAneuver3 жыл бұрын

    “He who would learn to fly one day must first learn to walk and run and climb and dance; one cannot fly into flying. ” ― Nietzsche. So many little eggs... Love it! Thank you Pills

  • @Badbentham
    @Badbentham3 жыл бұрын

    I can only warmly recommend to play Disco Elysium; - a video game that puts actual Schizoanalysis into motion, and portrays most important concepts from the books in a highly digestible form.

  • @fidii347

    @fidii347

    2 жыл бұрын

    Video games might be by far the easiest way to transmit this kind of experience comprehensibly

  • @spawel1

    @spawel1

    2 ай бұрын

    man that games so good

  • @pinklemonadeschannel

    @pinklemonadeschannel

    Ай бұрын

    there’s a japanese game from 1999 called “garage” which is probably more thousand plateau-ey but also a schizoanalytic game

  • @kerycktotebag8164
    @kerycktotebag81643 жыл бұрын

    I'm autistic and I had a schizophrenic close friend, and we talked about how autistic people get more attention than schizophrenic people because psychosis is harder to exploit than autism. But I think autism gives me some distance from common territorialisations, but in some ways makes me more likely to create territories of my own. Idiosyncratic territories instead of psychotic deterritorialisatiom. I also have psychotic tendencies ("psychotic features"), so i can relate to the fluidity, and to be honest, it helps balance out my autistic tendencies. There's a way to engage in deterritorialisation and to build "register" fluidity, through art and aesthetics, and you can bridge the gap to ethics through transpersonal non-oedipal intimacy and focusing on implicit, multi- perspectival participation. You don't necessarily have to become a nomad, but you need to have a fluid sense of self ("dividuated" as opposed to individuated). Becoming minor can be a political and mental deterritorialisation, and a more trans-subjective social deterritorialisation can be found in D-G and Ettinger (yes, Ettinger again!). It's not enough to dividuate and minoritize your politics. You have to practice self-fragilisation on an intimate level, to learn how to connect with other dividuated "partial subjects". The link between deterritorialised politics and deterritorialised subjectivity can be seen as the "proto"-ethics of dividuated people connecting in a dividuated way to the dividuated parts of other people. This can be found in schizoanalysis, phenomenology and things like "4e" (embodied, embedded, extended, enacted) cognitive psychology. That can connect to more explicity ethical things like virtue and care. Ettinger's entire project can be described as the proto-ethics of "going schizo without going insane". She talks about resonances and registers that are "non-oedipal" that can't be reduced to psychopathology and may arguably be registers that we learned very early on and persist and can never trulyy go away, only be coped and trained in different ways. The point is to do so skillfully and avoid pitfalls like oedipal splitting as well as completely unbridled delirium of phantasy that you can't control.

  • @sjuvanet

    @sjuvanet

    3 жыл бұрын

    you're autistic?!?? no...

  • @GiantArtProductions

    @GiantArtProductions

    3 жыл бұрын

    Where to start with Ettinger?

  • @kerycktotebag8164

    @kerycktotebag8164

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@sjuvanet is this an exercise in performative cruelty, or are you saying autism is the reason i made a post that other people seem to like and goes along well with the theme of the video?

  • @kerycktotebag8164

    @kerycktotebag8164

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@GiantArtProductions i started by watching her lectures on KZread videos. Her first name is "Bracha". She has a book ("Matrixial Borderspace") but it's pretty dense and references Lacan, Deleuze-Guattari and Levinas a lot.

  • @claspe1049

    @claspe1049

    3 жыл бұрын

    I believe that we get our affective indoctrinations from the faces of other people, autistic people being unable to do this they need create their super ego from abstract rules. Maybe creating a more concious perception of social rules, seeing the absurd in usual.

  • @bertwood3339
    @bertwood33393 жыл бұрын

    This is fantastic. I'm doing my dissertation on Anti Oedipus (good timing) and this video gave me a lot of hope in that I seem to understand the content (at least some of it), but it also dashed my dreams of ever being able to explain Deleuze and Guattari so brilliantly. Thank you for this wonderful video

  • @1Dimee
    @1Dimee3 жыл бұрын

    This is not just a theory video on KZread. This is ART of the finest quality

  • @thenowchurch6419

    @thenowchurch6419

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ah, now you are beginning to "get it". Aesthetics is the answer.

  • @michaelsurname609

    @michaelsurname609

    3 жыл бұрын

    Omg. Caring about the aesthetics of politics OVER actions! This is the reason fascists are in charge and leftists are allergic to victory.

  • @Hephaestikon

    @Hephaestikon

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelsurname609 Aesthetics can drive people to action and beyond, it's a shame only fascists have realized this.

  • @1Dimee

    @1Dimee

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Hephaestikon Yup.. The irony is that Fascists are aware that aesthetics are arguably just as important if not more important than the messages themselves. Some of the brightest thinkers recognize this like Adorno, Horkheimer, or Marshal McLuhan.

  • @mylesjeffers6148

    @mylesjeffers6148

    3 жыл бұрын

    @jay I've noticed that with most of the outfits he wears on this channel. He's definitely trying to do something with our perception of him

  • @modernmyth9050
    @modernmyth90502 жыл бұрын

    Ironic that Nick Land began taking on Deluze from an anti-capitalist perspective then mastered schizo-analysis and used it to unironically become reactionary 😂

  • @codycurtin2295

    @codycurtin2295

    11 ай бұрын

    A 4 year methamphetamine bender will do that to you.

  • @michaelcastady6600

    @michaelcastady6600

    11 ай бұрын

    ​​​@@codycurtin2295 he accelerated spatiotemporal phenomenonology via neo-shamanic transcendence

  • @jeangove01

    @jeangove01

    11 ай бұрын

    It's a weird version of reactionary. He took the logical path to the exit from humanity.

  • @xSaecredChaotixx

    @xSaecredChaotixx

    10 ай бұрын

    In the sequel the pair specifically warn against deterritorializing too quickly. Land missed the warnings.

  • @mikhailschipani2018

    @mikhailschipani2018

    10 ай бұрын

    Nick land was always kinda an edge lord

  • @johndoe4073
    @johndoe40733 жыл бұрын

    "Write to the nth power, the n - 1 power, write with slogans: Make rhizomes, not roots, never plant! Don’t sow, grow offshoots! Don’t be one or multiple, be multiplicities! Run lines, never plot a point! Speed turns the point into a line! Be quick, even when standing still! Line of chance, line of hips, line of flight. Don’t bring out the General in you! Don’t have just ideas, just have an idea (Godard). Have short-term ideas. Make maps, not photos or drawings. Be the Pink Panther and your loves will be like the wasp and the orchid, the cat and the baboon. As they say about old man river: He don’t plant ‘tatos Don’t plant cotton Them that plants them is soon forgotten But old man river he just keeps rollin’ along" - Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, pg. 24-25

  • @Nutstixsuckabutt

    @Nutstixsuckabutt

    3 жыл бұрын

    This reads like Allen Ginsberg’s poetry I love it lol

  • @Fryguystudios

    @Fryguystudios

    3 жыл бұрын

    I love how surreal it feels that after really reading into deleuze this makes perfect sense to me now.

  • @Sidious224
    @Sidious2243 жыл бұрын

    PlasticPills - Your videos are unequivocally the best explanations of complicated theoretical and philosophical ideas on KZread. I have never, ever thought any channel was worth donating to until this one. Your videos must continue! Thank you

  • @Havre_Chithra
    @Havre_Chithra Жыл бұрын

    This perfectly describes my 4 month drug induced psychosis in 2020. I saw myself as connected to history and so too was everyone else. There really was no separation between past or present nor between self and other. I saw how someone's language they used when speaking to me the veiled lies and dishonesties people would tell me and themselves (usually excuses couched in moral language or disguised as ethical obligations). I was completely lucid and to this day I don't think that how I was viewing things was wrong in any real sense... Just difficult and unsustainable in the circumstances I found myself in. After I cleaned up I stopped being able to view things that way and I became really depressed and actually missed that state... Years later I am starting to get back to that state but in a much more balanced and manageable way... Less intense, but still intense

  • @kylerodd2342

    @kylerodd2342

    10 ай бұрын

    I’ve gone through something similar. It came to a head when I accidentally hit that sort of psychosis, only without drugs this time, after what I can call a long thought experiment. I’ve found a balance though. It’s like, those sorts of intensities are always there but I don’t have to tune into them, or rather, I’m just tuned into something else that pushes everything else to the periphery.

  • @riahmatic
    @riahmatic2 жыл бұрын

    I feel like Lil B the based god is a more recent example of deterritorialization

  • @monnicamii

    @monnicamii

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank u based god

  • @sirbentington9092

    @sirbentington9092

    Ай бұрын

    “Tell the based god don’t quit his day job” - tbh I don’t listen to based god, but think capital steez would be an interesting rapper to schizo-analyse.

  • @julianguerrero5157
    @julianguerrero51573 жыл бұрын

    I can't belive how good and needed this is, from the visuals and the sutil touches that you give to every part, i find this as a master piece, wish more people could have access to this type of content.

  • @julianguerrero5157

    @julianguerrero5157

    3 жыл бұрын

    Love you so much haha

  • @NIHL000
    @NIHL0003 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for dedicating the time to this, Lacan's thought left me wanting for more and this has helped me understand what I couldn't put words to. Thank you so much for creating digestible content for those wishing to better understand these works!

  • @Kaiamora2
    @Kaiamora23 жыл бұрын

    To be a body without lungs, in a world without trees 🌠

  • @collapsiblechair9112
    @collapsiblechair91123 жыл бұрын

    I wish I was an animal and not self aware. It would be easier. I don't like to spend money, don't own a smartphone, I'm unsocial so I'm invisible. I am free from capitalism while living within it.

  • @mobiditch6848

    @mobiditch6848

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nice…

  • @heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382

    @heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382

    2 жыл бұрын

    wow how unique and brave

  • @collapsiblechair9112

    @collapsiblechair9112

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382 Thank you, I feel blessed

  • @heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382

    @heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@collapsiblechair9112 i was being sarcastic you twat put some effort into your social skills and you might not need to act like such a bellend, yeah?

  • @IAmNumber4000

    @IAmNumber4000

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sad thing is, capitalism leaves no part of the world unconquered. Even animals are a part of its mechanical production process, more often than not, being funneled into a slaughterhouse. Such is the fate of those who live under capitalism but have no power.

  • @damnboy1235
    @damnboy12353 жыл бұрын

    Dude, your channel is amazing. You're very good at making complicated theory accessible without dumbing it down into cliché and plattitude. I am glad I stumbled across your channel, it inspires me in my own thinking. All the best and keep up the amazing work.

  • @janquel9578
    @janquel95783 жыл бұрын

    holy this was worth the length!

  • @ryancier

    @ryancier

    3 жыл бұрын

    wish my ex said that

  • @brianlampugnani1911
    @brianlampugnani19113 жыл бұрын

    I´m surprised by the quality, the content and the beauty of your videos; more considering how hard is to approach certain subjects. Definitively your channel is my discovery of the year. Keep going (as long as you want, of course)!

  • @s2260
    @s22603 жыл бұрын

    Always feel good when your new content comes out .

  • @yodythewoadie
    @yodythewoadie3 жыл бұрын

    You've gained a follower! That microdose hit harder than expected when the podcast I was listening to mentioned 'GameStop' 'Autism' and 'Couldn't buy it fast enough' all within 10 seconds. Mind you, it was recorded in July 2019. Then I learned of the existence of the work of Deleuze and Guattari.

  • @88648
    @88648 Жыл бұрын

    This channel is the real deal! Amazing work! I’m hugely impressed and pleased to find it

  • @amycooper6800
    @amycooper68003 жыл бұрын

    For real I'm an artist and have been manifesting this place of connection theory in my work over this year and this is such a fucking light bulb moment, thank you!!

  • @kazz970
    @kazz9703 жыл бұрын

    This is one of the best explanations of C&S I've seen and I've taken grad level courses on this.

  • @primuscapere1722
    @primuscapere17223 жыл бұрын

    I'm diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and started pondering upon my diagnosis further than the DSM-V explains and this is very interesting.

  • @tyblazitar

    @tyblazitar

    2 жыл бұрын

    If you really want your mind blown, check out Madness and Modernism by Louis Sass.

  • @CamiloSalvadorMP
    @CamiloSalvadorMP3 жыл бұрын

    You said Dolce & Gabbana... got confused for half a second.

  • @hansmuller4338

    @hansmuller4338

    3 жыл бұрын

    xD me too, thought that was a rap reference or something

  • @aerion4077

    @aerion4077

    3 жыл бұрын

    same, and I've heard that joke before, I just wasn't expecting it at that exact second

  • @stephenduplantier2151

    @stephenduplantier2151

    3 жыл бұрын

    He was so deadpan when he made the joke that it was all the more funny.

  • @sachazoelamont6345
    @sachazoelamont63453 жыл бұрын

    This is amazing! Much kudos and many thanks! Your audio-visual presentation is superb. All it needs is dividing the video into chapters (segments) and making the menu in the down-right corner interactive (clickable). For example, "Delirium & Schizophrenia" - one clicks on the title, the tiny light, the sound and the content appears. That way the viewer can go back and forth, spend more time on some sections ("chapters") and go completely schizo. Thank you so much, I have just found PlasticPills. So good.

  • @paultremain1624
    @paultremain1624 Жыл бұрын

    This was a great video on "Anti-Oedipus"...a book I'm currently reading. The video really broke down some of the more complex concepts in a very insightful way. Well done and much appreciated.

  • @skylarkerzner8486
    @skylarkerzner84863 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, fantastic content. Your videos are dispersing 20th century philosophy, a lot of which still hasn't made it into the zeitgeist. I know you know how valuable that can be. If I was still teaching I'd totally make a philosophy seminar with your videos as some of the resources. I hope we can somehow get the creative ideas of 20th century philosophy in front of young people while they're still learning and before they enter permanent ideological camps, or lose the interest/energy/time to learn new perspectives, let alone fundamentally new ways of thinking. Thanks again and best wishes.

  • @prizmbreaker
    @prizmbreaker3 жыл бұрын

    This is quickly becoming one of my fav channels. Beard looks epic!

  • @guilloutube
    @guilloutube3 жыл бұрын

    one of the best videos on D&G's Anti oedipus on youtube. Great summary and annotations about this great work. Hope you make a continuation on 1,000 plateaus. And I would really like to have more on Guattari work such as molecular revolution :)

  • @kurtrambus2728
    @kurtrambus2728 Жыл бұрын

    As an old school hip hop head I applaud you using the native tongue as an example of this book..🎉🎉 you have a new subscriber.

  • @ThePrincesstoadstool
    @ThePrincesstoadstool3 жыл бұрын

    the past few months your videos and podcasts have answered/explained so many concepts & questions in my research-- seriously, the timing is crazy. thank u v much for the well-paced, accessible content and the earphone-ripping wilhelm scream.

  • @PlasticPills

    @PlasticPills

    3 жыл бұрын

    This gets my hype up, when screaming into void

  • @Yep-too
    @Yep-too3 жыл бұрын

    So much pleasure through conceptual forms and plastic substances. Can't thank you enough !

  • @humanBonsai
    @humanBonsai3 жыл бұрын

    This is my favourite video on KZread and I spend my life on this platform. Thank you

  • @joshuavarela304
    @joshuavarela3043 жыл бұрын

    This machine is ready for a philosophical update. Love your videos Plastic Pills ✌

  • @stefantaal5367
    @stefantaal53673 жыл бұрын

    The only channel where I click Like before I watch

  • @amycooper6800
    @amycooper68003 жыл бұрын

    This is the best video Ive seen in so long!! Keep it up man your channel gives me life

  • @ankushbanerjee9657
    @ankushbanerjee96573 жыл бұрын

    This was absolutely great! Thank you for making this. One of the best online resources to understand this difficult treatise. Pls keep doing this. You guys are awesome 👏🏼

  • @LukePalmer
    @LukePalmer3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Just in time, too -- I have anti-oedipus here on my table, and have opened it up a few times with my eyes kind of glazing over / rereading each paragraph like nine times. Anyway, great to have an orientation on it, maybe this will help me "follow" it a bit better. And great high-quality, thoughtful video as always!

  • @EpicsOfTime

    @EpicsOfTime

    3 жыл бұрын

    At a certain point I just started plunging into the confusing interpretations I was creating rather than trying to ask “but what does it really mean.” Not sure if that was the point, but it helped me

  • @Unboxning
    @Unboxning3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for giving a good introduction to this book! The title "Anti-Oedipus" has always interested me but i've been scared of it because of the difficulty of Deleuze's languague

  • @alexfournier8974
    @alexfournier89743 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this video! Been working my way up to this book by jumping around Deleuze's bigger influences in hopes of getting a foothold on the text. This made approaching the book feel less intimidating.

  • @misterdemocracy3335
    @misterdemocracy33353 жыл бұрын

    I haven’t engaged with it a lot but Deleuze seems to really go over my head. Thanks for giving me some substance to wrap my head around.

  • @fyviane
    @fyviane3 жыл бұрын

    only 13 minutes in and i absolutely love both the content and the visuals!!

  • @d_lars
    @d_lars3 жыл бұрын

    This is great man. Super juicy content. Turned on the notification bell

  • @jaysingh05
    @jaysingh053 жыл бұрын

    This is awesome. Read vol 1 a while ago; Felt like the toughest thing I’d ever read. Read Vol 2 more recently, and made lots more sense. This motivated me to go back and read vol 1 again. Among other things. Great breakdown.

  • @JoukeKruijer
    @JoukeKruijer3 жыл бұрын

    This video left a big smile on my face. I am writing (well writing) a PhD on organizational change. My drafts so far have pushed the boundaries of academic rigour. Your video inspired me to go much much further with this....It's an awesome feeling to work from within against as if you are working from without... Keep em coming PlasticPills...

  • @Mlkshke4

    @Mlkshke4

    Жыл бұрын

    how’d your PhD go?

  • @forestprophet

    @forestprophet

    8 ай бұрын

    Hoe is het afgelopen? :)

  • @monogalaxia
    @monogalaxia2 жыл бұрын

    Just wanted to say, my favorite channel in all youtube, thanks a lot for the effort

  • @saanviwadhwa1339
    @saanviwadhwa1339 Жыл бұрын

    this is ART!! ive been struggling with these concepts for so long holy shit you made it so easy 😭

  • @11kravitzn
    @11kravitzn2 жыл бұрын

    Just found my new favorite channel. Better than all bread tube combined.

  • @TheProtagonizer
    @TheProtagonizer Жыл бұрын

    Incredible video, never thought Id find an explanation so well written. Thanks for uploading.

  • @vassikichauhan2467
    @vassikichauhan24673 жыл бұрын

    Wow, this is incredible!!! Thanks for making this video. Linearity can really help with making things accessible, so don't beat yourself up about walking before you run.

  • @strawsandneedles8733
    @strawsandneedles87333 жыл бұрын

    I honestly never thought in my life I would understand these guys. Absolutely floored by the amazing work! This channel is a serious game changer.

  • @jackri7676
    @jackri76763 жыл бұрын

    let’s go i’ve been dying for a well made deleuze video!!

  • @situational476
    @situational4763 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this, maybe your best video yet! I just started reading Foucault's 'The Order of Things' and this really helped me understand what he's getting at when he calls us to subvert these orders and cross boundaries - perfect timing!

  • @autolycuse2554
    @autolycuse25543 жыл бұрын

    I love your artistic editing style

  • @qaisellkurdi962
    @qaisellkurdi9623 жыл бұрын

    Bro this channel is criminally underrated

  • @ClaytonLivsey
    @ClaytonLivsey3 жыл бұрын

    Excellent video! I listened to this video on a walk, can't wait to sit and watch it through with all your animations. I wish you went into Deleuze and social media the same way you went into Lacan and social media, and if you need help writing that video I'd love to help!

  • @DiegoMDeras
    @DiegoMDeras3 жыл бұрын

    This video is INCREDIBLY informative, I finally feel like I’m grasping some of these concepts. Thanks so much!

  • @richardpfeifer2190
    @richardpfeifer2190 Жыл бұрын

    Your a great teacher! I’ve been into psychology and philosophy for way over fifty years. I probably had six teachers that really have the ability to we weave layer into layer pulling me forward. Wish you were around then!

  • @poppysunsettlingstories
    @poppysunsettlingstories3 жыл бұрын

    Excellent work again. Always enjoy your content. Keep it up!

  • @whataboutthis10
    @whataboutthis103 жыл бұрын

    'we should be more schizo' ..heard it also from good old Terrence McKenna

  • @Kurofune
    @Kurofune3 жыл бұрын

    The best video I've seen on the topic. You are amazing, mate.

  • @ewanfresco3498
    @ewanfresco34983 жыл бұрын

    This is, by far, one of my favorite breakdowns of D&G

  • @Hephaestikon
    @Hephaestikon3 жыл бұрын

    AN incredibly inspiring take on our existence. Gave me a lot to chew on.

  • @rawalshadab3812
    @rawalshadab38123 жыл бұрын

    Excellent work! I'm reading Deleuze and Guattari these days and feel like I understand it better now!

  • @SeedStalkerKlan
    @SeedStalkerKlan3 жыл бұрын

    Once again, thank you. D&G are not the easiest and (I think) you managed to stay true to the core idea. Also, I don't know if a translation in english exists but "Deleuze's alphabet book" is a very good starting point to understand his way of thinking things!

  • @PlasticPills

    @PlasticPills

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm interviewing the translator of Labecedaire tomorrow

  • @atreyimitra7497
    @atreyimitra74972 жыл бұрын

    i have a presentation on this tomorrow and I'm so glad I stumbled upon this video

  • @adamcope6890
    @adamcope68902 жыл бұрын

    I really like the example of diagrammatic thinking you use to lay out the stratification of the subject.

  • @michadewandeler4028
    @michadewandeler40283 жыл бұрын

    First video I've seen of you and it's really fucking impressive. I'm psyched to read this book again.

  • @samkim3329
    @samkim33293 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for taking the time to break this complex book down for us!! I feel that I was spinning around in Dr. Who's red box!!

  • @mariocastillo3441
    @mariocastillo34413 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate the lack of jump cuts. It makes the whole video feel alot more personal, honestly.

  • @beatles5235
    @beatles52352 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much!!!!!!! Ive been trying to get through and understand this book for about a year now and this breakdown is as a vreath of fresh air to me :)

  • @manuelp2494
    @manuelp24943 жыл бұрын

    I love this video. So much work behind. Thank you so much, pana.

  • @user-fk4uy6ov1h
    @user-fk4uy6ov1h Жыл бұрын

    one of the best videos i watched in my entire life (also, i am trying to read anti-oedipus right now for a paper in university and i was about to give up because of the hard language but man, you made me give up on the giving up)

  • @dtilleyflix
    @dtilleyflix2 жыл бұрын

    Fab presentation. Very informative and will help in my re-reading of these texts

  • @4stringedninja
    @4stringedninja3 жыл бұрын

    I was in real need for a theory like this. Since I about 9 months ago started getting into continental philosophy (started with Bataille and Barthes, atm more trying to get a grasp on Baudrillard and Lacan) I've frequently been having experiences of non-linear/schizophrenic thinking. I've frequently been coming up with and connecting ideas and signs purely by associative, sometimes almost random thought, and even sometimes perceiving everyday reality in this sort of deterritorrialized fashion. I hadn't been able to grasp why this was happening (was even seriously considering if I was starting to go insane), but seeing this I can actually attempt to start making sense of my mind again, perhaps starting with reading Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus . Thanks for your videos PP, you the best!

  • @szhou1718
    @szhou17183 жыл бұрын

    This is amazing! Immediately bought the book after watching your video

  • @Syllogyzym
    @Syllogyzym3 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thank you so much for continuing to put out the best theory content on KZread. Peace from Oregon

  • @CallaOrion
    @CallaOrion3 жыл бұрын

    Recently finished ATP and this was a great refresher. Thanks!

  • @chrisrosenkreuz23
    @chrisrosenkreuz233 жыл бұрын

    "a miraculous stomach" that's a good name for an indie album

  • @monogalaxia

    @monogalaxia

    2 жыл бұрын

    For an avant garde restaurant…

  • @vallewabbel9690
    @vallewabbel96903 жыл бұрын

    This video was incredibly well made, thanks for the content!

  • @joeharris3297
    @joeharris32973 жыл бұрын

    This is fucking incredible work, this video was rewarding af to watch and I learned a ton. Cannot thank you enough!

  • @Canihavecookies
    @Canihavecookies3 жыл бұрын

    Great video man, thank you so much. Very valuable as a friend between my having-read Anti Oedipus and my am-going-to-read thousand plateaus!

  • @calvinmirandamoritz4507
    @calvinmirandamoritz45073 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for your videos, your work is incredibly valuable. It either makes me want to read a book or helps me understand one i've just read, so thanks.

  • @brunellabigi7807
    @brunellabigi78072 жыл бұрын

    Deleuze and Guattari were geniuses. What they wrote in the '70 is taking shape today. Thank you

  • @egoistroman8238
    @egoistroman82383 жыл бұрын

    This video is so good, deserves at least 1 million views

  • @domenicmolinaro6580
    @domenicmolinaro65803 жыл бұрын

    Thanks again for the great overview, I'm getting a good surface level understanding of many thinkers I've been interested in due to your work. Any plans to do a video on McLuhan? Since you seem to specialize in making dense or otherwise difficult thinkers that are relevant to modern life more digestible, I feel like a McLuhan video would be of immense value to many people. I'm curious how you would interpret the internet-as-medium and it's impact on us. I think it would be an organic link to your recent dive into schizophrenia and systems of control etc., since the internet affords the opportunity to be a di-vidual and explore every sector identityless.

  • @fredelice
    @fredelice3 жыл бұрын

    Great video, man!! Keep doing them

  • @expreserge1
    @expreserge12 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this, bro! I'll grab my copy this saturday!!!

  • @than9025
    @than90253 жыл бұрын

    mind blowing explanation, good work!

  • @samuelbridgeland7740
    @samuelbridgeland77403 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this explanation. It's helping build the confidence I need to pick these books up in the first place.

  • @monsieurlouche1231
    @monsieurlouche1231 Жыл бұрын

    Great content dude, you don't just paraphrase what you read, which always bore me when i search for commentaries of intellectuals i like, but you have your self appropriation of a book and a nice way of talking about it, pretty cool. Nice energy.

  • @jayw5273
    @jayw52733 жыл бұрын

    awesome vid dude. I always struggled with schizoanalysis, but this really elucidated it for me.

  • @123456789tube100
    @123456789tube1003 жыл бұрын

    Awesome man Thanks Been needing a video like this for ages It is a dense book so I need as much knowledge beforehand Especially if u r not a philosophy student in university I first heard about Deleuze through Infinite Jest Then I got into Accelerationism and bought the accelerarionist reader, had a friend send me malign velocities, just read capitalist realism and I have listened to everything you have made on Deleuze so far

  • @turpinglipper9171
    @turpinglipper91719 ай бұрын

    Some great insights and perspectives. This is a great channel, you do great work. Thanks