On stasiosemiotics and semiostasis: Deleuze, Guattari, and the potential of group phantasms for radical politics Cover Image

On stasiosemiotics and semiostasis: Deleuze, Guattari, and the potential of group phantasms for radical politics
On stasiosemiotics and semiostasis: Deleuze, Guattari, and the potential of group phantasms for radical politics

Author(s): Simon Levesque
Subject(s): Semiotics / Semiology, Semiology, Political Philosophy, Social Philosophy, Structuralism and Post-Structuralism
Published by: Tartu Ülikooli Kirjastus
Keywords: semiosis; stasis; group phantasm; radical politics; Deleuze and Guattari;

Summary/Abstract: Stasiosemiotics is made of two concepts: ‘stasis’ and ‘semiotics’. Stasis is a concept that refers to both the division of society and a suspension of time. As a branch of general semiotics, its specific focus, or object, is semiosis stasis, or semiostasis, which is technically impossible: by definition, semiosis is evergoing, continuous and infinite. Though paradoxical, semiostasis can nevertheless inspire a method to study sign systems and objects of which the meaning form is profoundly intricate and temporally stratified. Among such inextricably complex objects shaping constellations of signs are phantasms and political fictions, or ‘group phantasms’ in Guattari’s terminology. Although on different levels, they both act as meaning condensers partaking in social subjectivation and alienation. Leaning on Deleuze and Guattari’s semiotics of phantasm, political philosophy and anthropology, and poetics, ‘stasis’ can be understood both in the political sense (civil strife, division of the political body) and in the aesthetical sense (standstill – as in ecstasy, ek-stasis: being out of oneself, out of ego, in suspended time). Stasiosemiotics aims to virtually suspend the motion of semiosis (or what Guattari calls ‘semiotic fluxes’) for the profit of an inquiry on the intricacies of signs formation and operation. The conclusion suggests ethical consequences regarding the consciousness of habit and implications for radical politics.

  • Issue Year: 53/2025
  • Issue No: 1-2
  • Page Range: 195-219
  • Page Count: 25
  • Language: English
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