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UID:20211013T1600Z-1634140832.447-EO-20408-37@10.19.146.14
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DTSTAMP:20260607T033353Z
CREATED:20160629T231823Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210816T200823Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20140305T173000
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SUMMARY: Reza Negarestani — Where the Concept Takes You
DESCRIPTION: The concept is addressed no longer by what it is\, but by wher
 e it is situated or where it subsists – from ‘what is a concept’ to ‘where 
 is a concept’ The Department of Art History Visual Art and Theory is please
 d to announce the visit of Reza Negarestani to Vancouver this March. In the
  […]
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <h4>The concept is addressed no longer by wha
 t it is\, but by where it is situated or where it subsists - from 'what is 
 a concept' to 'where is a concept'</h4><p>The Department of Art History Vis
 ual Art and Theory is pleased to announce the visit of <strong>Reza Negares
 tani</strong> to Vancouver this March. In the first of a series of events\,
  Negarestani will be delivering a public lecture\, Where the Concept Takes 
 You\, on Wednesday March 5 at 5:30pm\, join our MFA seminar the following d
 ay\, as well as conduct a further public lecture at Simon Fraser University
 \, and participate as a keynote speaker at <em>Incredible Machines: Digital
 ity and the Modern System of Knowledge at the Threshold of the 21st Century
 </em>\, to be held at Access Gallery on Friday March 7 and Saturday March 8
 .</p><p>Reza Negarestani is a philosopher. He has contributed extensively t
 o journals and anthologies and lectured at numerous international universit
 ies and institutes. His current philosophical project is focused on rationa
 list universalism beginning with the evolution of the modern system of know
 ledge and advancing toward contemporary philosophies of rationalism\, their
  procedures as well as their demands for special forms of human conduct.</p
 ><p>Negarestani’s book\,<em> Cyclonopedia</em>\, is frequently claimed as a
  key text in the fields of theory-fiction or new weird-fiction. It was judg
 ed one of the best books of 2009 by<em> Artforum</em>\, a mark of the impac
 t his work has begun to make upon the artworld in recent years\, alongside 
 numerous invitations to speak at galleries and museums\, including the Migu
 el Abreu Gallery\, The Guggenheim Museum\, and the recent Escape Velocities
  symposium at e-flux in New York. His essay\, “The Labor of the Inhuman\, P
 art I: Human” is the lead article in the current issue of e-flux journal.</
 p><p><strong>Where the Concept Takes You</strong></p><p><em>From a formalis
 t perspective\, the concept is introduced as a space over which man has no 
 hold. It is an epistemic cue in an otherwise qualitatively homogenous infor
 mation space - a desert - for which no map and no compass is given. The ges
 ture that constitutes the concept is a response to the question of localiza
 tion (where to begin and how to proceed) in an environment where there is n
 either an a-priori determination of the initial place nor a given survey of
  the general landscape. In this situation\, building extensive maps capable
  of holding the semantic load across different patches of the landscape lea
 ds to various epistemic complications. In order to avoid such complications
 \, the concept is reformulated as a mobile frame\, a transitory epistemic c
 ue which procedurally informs its construction\, extension and revision. Bu
 t this reformulation amounts to a drastic shift in the ontology of the conc
 ept. The concept is addressed no longer by what it is\, but by where it is 
 situated (Leibniz) or where it subsists (Lawvere) - from 'what is a concept
 ' to 'where is a concept'. This presentation attempts to unpack the consequ
 ences of understanding the concept as a specific navigational abstraction o
 f the local site or the place in terms of how such an abstraction brings in
 to focus hidden cracks and defects in the classical portrait of concepts. <
 /em></p><p><strong>Weblinks:</strong></p><p>For more information and regist
 ration for the<em> Incredible Machines </em>conference\, (where Negarestani
  will be joined by Alexander R. Galloway\, Suhail Malik\, AHVA faculty memb
 ers Jaleh Mansoor and T’ai Smith\, and recent AHVA graduate students Ali Ah
 adi\, Kate Henderson\, Robin Simpson and conference organizer Mohammad Sale
 my\, amongst others) please go to:</p><p>incredible-machines-2014<br /><a h
 ref="http://incrediblemachines.info/">http://incrediblemachines.info/</a></
 p><p>“The Labor of the Inhuman” on e-flux<br /><a href="http://www.e-flux.c
 om/journal/the-labor-of-the-inhuman-part-i-human/">http://www.e-flux.com/jo
 urnal/the-labor-of-the-inhuman-part-i-human/</a></p><p>“What is Philosophy”
  on Negarestani’s blog<br /><a href="http://blog.urbanomic.com/cyclon/archi
 ves/2014/01/philosophy.html#more">http://blog.urbanomic.com/cyclon/archives
 /2014/01/philosophy.html#more</a></p><p>Reza Negarestani on Wikipedia<br />
 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reza_Negarestani">https://en.wikiped
 ia.org/wiki/Reza_Negarestani</a></p>
LOCATION:Frederic Lasserre\, Room 104
GEO:49.267665;-123.255830
URL;VALUE=URI:https://ahva.ubc.ca/events/event/reza-negarestani-where-the-c
 oncept-takes-you/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ahva.cms.arts.ubc.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/37/2021/05/1279.jpg
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DTSTART:20131103T090000
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