Readings 03 – Virilio, “Silence on Trial”

Hi everyone,

As we agreed, we’ll go with an excerpt from Paul Virilio’s book Art and Fear (Continuum, 2006). We’ll be reading the essay “Silence on Trial” (p. 35–49), which you can download from here: Virilio – Art and Fear – excerpts. “Silence on Trial” was originally published in French in 2000. I’ve included John Armitage’s introduction to the volume (optional), which might offer a useful opening into the essay.

Virilio’s writing is impressionistic and copious; he’s a critic—not a philosopher. (I [Eamonn] happen to think this isn’t a disadvantage) In case you are looking for more context, Armitage, who is one of Virilio’s most prolific exegetes in English, has written an OK volume called Virilio and the Media that aggregates a lot of his writing in one place and has a relatively useful glossary of terms at the end. You can also try his “Paul Virilio: An Introduction” in Theory, Culture & Society.

As ever, responses on any aspect of the reading are welcome. We were interested in drawing out the theme of surprise and/or humor by the end of the last meeting, so feel free to touch on that in relation to the target text or your own work/interests.

The next discussion group meeting will be online at 12 p.m. (New York) / 5 p.m. (London) on April 30th 2020; we’ll post the link to the Google Hangouts session closer to the time.

— Eamonn and Ezra

Armitage, John. “Paul Virilio: An Introduction.” Theory, Culture & Society 16, no. 5–6 (December 1, 1999): 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1177/02632769922050845.

 

 

 

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