Affect: Lisa Blackman and Couze Venn
Affect: Lisa Blackman and Couze Venn
Affect: Lisa Blackman and Couze Venn
A number of developments over the last two decades or so make it timely for
Body & Society to host a Special Issue on the theme of affect. A number of
concepts have appeared in the social and human sciences, as well as in the natural
sciences, that emphasize the fact that social and natural phenomena are complex,
processual, indeterminate, relational and constantly open to effects from contigu-
ous processes.
Additionally, interest in the theme of ‘affective labour’ and the capitalization
or economization of affect and emotion through teletechnologies and a multitude
of therapies have drawn attention to affect as a phenomenon in need of fresh
study.1 Advances in the fields of genetics and biological sciences, mathematics,
quantum physics/the physics of small particles, neurosciences, narrative analysis,
media and information theory have contributed to this epistemological shift. In
its wake, a common ontology linking the social and the natural, the mind and
body, the cognitive and affective is beginning to appear, grounded in such concepts
as assemblage, flow, turbulence, emergence, becoming, compossibility, relation-
ality, the machinic, the inventive, the event, the virtual, temporality, autopoiesis,
heterogeneity and the informational, for example. One important focus of this
Special Issue is to spark interest and ongoing engagement in questions of method
and experimentation in light of the common ontologies emerging across the
humanities, and the natural, social and human sciences.
Body & Society Copyright © The Author(s) 2010, Reprints and permissions:
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Vol. 16(1): 7–28; DOI: 10.1177/1357034X09354769
www.sagepublications.com
8 ■ Body & Society Vol. 16 No. 1
The ‘turn to affect’ across the humanities and social sciences has particular
importance for the field of body-studies. One consequence of the heightened
interest in the non-verbal, non-conscious dimensions of experience is a re-
engagement with sensation, memory, perception, attention and listening. If much
of what passes as experience occurs in this realm, how then can we model the
psychic and sensory apparatuses that afford specific kinds of embodied knowing?
If bodies are characterized by their intercorporeality and trans-subjectivity then
how can we decouple such experiences from a singular, bounded and distinctly
human body and what kinds of theoretical and methodological innovation will
make this possible? This is one aspect of work organizing this Special Issue that
connects the themes of body, affect and life, and that directs our attention to the
question of what kinds of trans-disciplinary collaboration and engagement are
possible and realizable. These questions do not originate within the turn to affect,
as similar concerns have appeared and appear across feminist theories of the
body, as well as in various psychoanalytic approaches that appeared prior to the
‘affective turn’. Indeed, the genealogies of these various concerns, and how they
might be put into dialogue with each other, reveal how different approaches
address similar problematics. As we see in this Special Issue, the affective turn
specifically encourages engagements with subjects that foreground the question
of what do we mean when we invoke, examine and enact the body in body-
studies. These include an engagement within this Special Issue with collective
forms of intelligence, such as swarming or decisions made on the stock market
floor; with community regeneration among a former South Wales steelworker
community; with the multivalent rhythmic constitution of the dancehall scene in
Jamaica; with technologies of listening and attention such as telepathy, sugges-
tion and voice-hearing; with a body-without-an-image, rather than the concept
of body-image that we are so habituated to; with the idea that bodies are always
more-than-one; and with a cautious reflection on the neurosciences and their
increasing authorization within the humanities as knowledge-practices ripe to be
plundered for concepts to substantiate certain explanatory concepts (such as
affect). The turn to affect is therefore one which helps us to complicate bodily
matters, but equally, as Clare Hemmings (2005) reminds us, is one which should
also be approached by considering the ethics of the conceptual and analytic appa-
ratuses that are becoming associated with the affective turn.
One of the functions of an editorial framing of an issue is to provide clarity
and offer definitions of some of the key concepts and issues being explored. For
those new to this area, or perhaps only beginning to encounter the importance
of affect in your own work, this might entail a response to an imagined and
perceived question, ‘What is affect?’ However, a more cautious response might
Affect ■ 9
issues that are being highlighted in this Special Issue. Game recounts her own
experience of helping her horse, KP, to regain the ability to trot and canter
following the horse’s paralysis. She describes how her eventual successful attempt,
after much hard work and struggle, came about through forgetting that she was
separate from the animal. This was nothing to do with will-power (the idea of
mind over matter), but rather she equates this forgetting to a letting go of self-
consciousness. In this state she was able to mount KP, and to try and connect
with subtle movements that the horse was making in order to help her to
remember what it felt like to canter and trot with a rider. In this sense, memory
was plural, co-constituted and co-enacted through attuning to subtle move-
ments which involved the development of a shared kinaesthetic modality of
attention. This kinaesthetic modality involved the entraining of horse and human
through rhythmic forms of communication; a kind of ‘kinetic melody’ (see
Sheets-Johnstone, 2009), which through movement allowed a re-memorialization
of proprioception to emerge. As Game suggests (2001: 1):
. . . connectings between human and animal are creative processes of coming to be. Putting into
question humanist assumptions, I propose that we are always already part horse, and horses,
part human; there is no such thing as pure horse or pure human. The human body is not simply
human.
to tell the time and solve complex multiplication puzzles by stamping his hooves.
Two explanations were given for Hans’s apparent prodigious talents; either the
horse had psychic capabilities or he was a genius. Despret re-visits the psychol-
ogist Pfungst’s re/visioning of this anomalous event and comes to some rather
different conclusions about the basis of Hans’s unusual capacities. Pfungst suggests
that Hans was indeed disclosing a capacity for intelligent thinking, but the modal-
ities of intelligent thinking being enacted by Hans with an experimenter were due
to Hans’s ability to ‘read’ minimal bodily communications. Despret argues that
‘not only could he read bodies, but he could make human bodies be moved and
affected, and move and affect other beings and perform things without their
owners’ knowledge’ (2004: 113). As long as Hans could see the experimenter he
was able to attune to minimal forms of bodily communication that the experi-
menter was not aware they were exhibiting. For example, if the experimenter
knew the answer was six, just before Hans stamped his hooves for the sixth time
the experimenter would make a very subtle and minute movement that the horse
would respond to. When the experimenter did not know the answer, Hans was
not able to perform his amazing feat. Despret suggests that this example of an
unusual experience or perception which could not be integrated into the knowl-
edge practices of psychology challenges the assumption that the human subject
is separate, bounded and can be clearly differentiated from the animal. Indeed, if
evolutionary biology is founded on the idea that the human and animal are linked
through the sharing of ancestral genetic processual systems, then this example
shows that continuities and differences can be made and re-made in different
practices, revealing the creative evolution at play in our co-constitutive inter-
relationships of being and becoming: animal and human. As Despret proposes;
‘Who influences and who is influenced, in this story, are questions that can no
longer receive a clear answer’ (2004: 115).
It is important to stress that although this example is very interesting, it leaves
out an examination of the associated milieu that allowed the ‘intelligent beha-
viour’ to take form, i.e. what was the human-animal-environment set-up, what
amount of prior learning had gone on (admitted or hidden), what level of relia-
bility to attribute to the account and what disciplined methods were used to
gather the evidence, etc.? The importance of the milieu in analyses of affective
relations is taken up by a number of articles in this Special Issue and is an im-
portant aspect of examining co-constitution and co-enaction (see the articles by
Henriques, Manning, Venn).
In more recent work Despret (2008) has turned her attention to attempts to
teach animals to speak using the signs and symbols of human language making.
This has long been a preoccupation of psychologists, biologists and primatologists
Affect ■ 13
interested in affect have turned to the neurosciences to authorize their own epis-
temological and ontological claims, and often rely upon the reiteration of a partic-
ular set of references and citations to the neuroscientific literatures. They argue
that these citations are part of what they term ‘a strange and partial (mis)trans-
lation of complex scientific models into the epistemologically distinct space of
the humanities and social sciences’. Thus, importantly, the trans-disciplinarity
of theory and method that affect theory foregrounds (see Clough, 2007) also
makes visible the difficulties in selectively appropriating particular kinds of scien-
tific concepts and explanatory structures, divorcing and abstracting them from
their complex and often contested circuits of debate, legitimacy and authorization.
Furthermore, scientific findings or explanations are constantly being revised,
while borrowings by humanities scholars are often attached to what in effect are
provisional explanations. A similar point is also taken up by Lisa Blackman in
her article, ‘Embodying Affect: Voice-hearing, Telepathy, Suggestion and Model-
ling the Non-conscious’, where she argues that an engagement with experiences,
theories and concepts marginal to the mainstream of the neurological and psy-
chological sciences might yield more inventive models of affective processes. She
focuses upon experiences such as voice-hearing, suggestion and telepathic modes
of affective transfer, which breach the boundaries between the material and the
immaterial, the inside and the outside, the self and the other, and the sane and the
insane, for example. She suggests that an engagement with neuroscientific work
marginal to the neurosciences (such as work linked by the concept of the bicam-
eral mind) might re-invent and recuperate histories of the occult, the ethereal, the
enchanted and the immaterial which have been occluded and excluded from the
mainstream psychological and neurological sciences.
Papoulias and Callard convincingly engage and interrogate the new forms of
materiality that are being enacted and performed across affect theory in tandem
with the neurosciences; one characterized as a ‘vision of nature with no fixity’.
The emphasis on movement, on the dynamism and plasticity of matter, and
particularly on the subindividual, cellular self-organizing properties of matter,
define the focus on bodily affectivity (particularly the argument that bodies
should be defined by their capacities to affect and be affected),3 as an inherently
political project organized around an ethics of hope and optimism for change.
Paradoxically, the particular kind of ‘conversation’ that is taking place between
the humanities and neurosciences, filtered through affect theory, is one that tends
to rely upon a language of verification; ‘see this is how affect works’, which
occludes the complex procedures of contestation, from critical psychologists for
example, who have done much to undermine and trouble the practices and habits
of positivist science. As Papoulias and Callard argue, it is through the old foun-
Affect ■ 15
Henriques develops Glaser and Strauss’s grounded theory (1967), moving the
research object to repetition (of frequencies) as opposed to the focus on repre-
sentation usual for this qualitative methodology. This is organized through
distinct categories, including counting, measuring and listening, where the act of
listening combines all the senses and is oriented towards the ‘event’ of the scene.
The three elements of vibrations that Henriques identifies, frequencies, ampli-
tudes and timbres, provide the methodological basis for understanding affect in
the analysis that follows.
Henriques provides an interesting visualization of these elements in his
Frequency Spectrogram, which plays on the cataloguing so dear to scientific
archiving but which includes elements that are not usually brought into dialogue,
interdependence and interrelationship with each other. These might include the
blood and lymphatic system, heart rate, pulse rate and synaptic activity in the
brain, being brought into relation with the circadian rhythms of day and night, the
materiality of the turntables and records, the longitudinal soundwaves, rhythms
and beats, the light waves, calendars of events, the motility of the crowd between
sessions and the role of the MC with his or her call and response, to name just
some of the elements brought into exchange and interchange. This ecology of
elements, Henriques suggests, is part of the complex apparatus which allows or
affords affect to move. However, the question of how these processes of move-
ment might be modelled is still part of the problematic that confronts scholars
regarding how we understand, analyse and enact affective processes in our own
analyses. Henriques provides a really useful mapping of some of the assumptions
about movement that have entered into studies of affective processes. One that
has been central to the humanities is the idea that what moves are objects, even if
these objects are molecular entities such as pheromones in the work of Teresa
Brennan for example (2004). One version of movement that has been developed
in the discipline of dance studies that has had an important purchase within
body-studies is that of bodily kinetics. This has been taken up by Erin Manning
in her study of tango (2007, see also Manning, this issue) and emphasizes bodily
movement as being central to embodied experience. Maxine Sheets-Johnstone
(2009) has emphasized the primacy of movement in her own philosophy of subjec-
tivity, and this replaces, or extends and problematizes, what is understood as the
cogito in cognitivist or epistemological discourses; it also challenges the dualisms
inscribed in such discourses with more kinaesthetic modalities of knowing and
thinking. This work is hugely important in replacing the inert mass or dumb
materiality of corporeality that has been a symptom of some discursive approaches,
with what we might term a ‘somatically felt’ body (see Blackman, 2008a, for a
development of this).
Affect ■ 17
in the life of the town. This work suggests that material objects, such as the steel-
works, can also be thought of as psychic objects containing the projections of the
townspeople, where the material and immaterial are linked through the circula-
tion of particular affective dynamics and processes. The reading of the material as
engaged in a complex psychic geography arguably has been central to different
psychoanalytic approaches. Thus affective dynamics can be spatialized in terms
of the particular geography and spacing of the town (including terraced houses
with low fences); and particular spatial configurations can amplify particular
affective dynamics and modulate, augment or even destroy dynamics that have
been an important part of what makes a community ‘tight-knit’. Walkerdine
weaves together extracts from her interview data to illustrate aspects of these
affective dynamics with an engagement with and development of work on trauma
(Ettinger, 2006), which emphasizes an understanding of the unconscious that is
always partial, plural, shared and co-emergent between subjects. As Ettinger
suggests:
A matrixial encounter engenders shared traces, traumas, pictograms, and fantasies in several
partners conjointly but differently, accepted and partly created by diffuse matrixial affects; it
engenders nonconscious readjustments of their connectivity and reattunements of trans-
subjectivity. (2006: 65)
self-sufficient entity persists in much social science research in spite of the critique
of Cartesianism and unitary subjectivity in contemporary philosophy and critical
thought (Hollway et al., 1998 [1984]). Because there is always an excess to be-
coming (expressed in Deleuzian terms as the realm of the virtual), then taking
form is always a dynamic process that never stands still, as it were.
Indeed, the concept of individuation, rather than the individual, refers to the
creative evolution at the heart of becoming. In this sense, bodies are always being
‘undone’ and re-made in the context of ‘actual occasions’ (Whitehead, 1978). As
Manning suggests: ‘Actual occasions are micro-events in a larger process of
becoming, themselves absolutely and only what they are.’ In this sense a body is
never separate from its milieu, which provides, as we see with Henriques’ article
in this issue, the medium and practices (corporeal and socio-cultural) which allow
or afford the potential for bodies (individual and collective) to take form or move.
In this sense, Manning argues that ‘the body is always more than human’ and
affect is always collective. As she goes on to argue: ‘Affect is a chorus of feelings
barely felt through which events begin to take form. A body is an event for
affective resonance.’ This takes affect outside of the confines of a bounded,
singular body and asks us to re-think some of our inherited concepts that are at
the heart of how we might think affective relations. This work is complicated and
challenging, and requires contextualization and elaboration in relation to actual
or ‘real’ practices (as we see in the work of Henriques, this issue), but offers
much in obliging us to rethink what it means to be human and what it means to
‘have a body’.
Couze Venn’s article, ‘Individuation, Relationality, Affect: Rethinking the
Human in Relation to the Living’, takes the themes we find in Manning’s work
further by putting them to work in relation to experiences that we all may have
witnessed, experienced or found ourselves perplexed by. Venn starts his article
with a beguiling description of the choreography of ‘swarming’ among birds, that
discloses the patterns in movement afforded by the turbulence of air currents and
the birds’ capacities to fly. What is interesting about this phenomenon is precisely
the patterns rather than randomness of the displays, revealing, Venn suggests, the
forms of collective intelligence that animate the movement. Venn’s problematic
is precisely the ‘more than one’ of bodies that Manning draws our attention to,
revealed in collective forms of action that appear to operate below the thresh-
old of conscious, rational experience. These forms of collective intelligence are
precisely those that are shared across different life forms and which Venn also
identifies in the behaviour of financial dealers and agents on the stock market
floor. This draws our attention both to the milieu of the ‘dealer–technology
complex’, which includes the range of technologies that allow or afford the dealer
22 ■ Body & Society Vol. 16 No. 1
to concentrate or become attuned to the ‘feel of the market’, and which para-
doxically disappear from view when this feel for the market is described. Venn
suggests that developing a ‘feel for the market’ involves the conjoining of ‘cogni-
tive and affective sensing and thinking, the integration of feeling and calculating
such that body-mind-world meld into one organism’. As we know, with the
global recession and financial collapse of the world markets in 2008, economic
activity is far from rational. Venn extends the notion of information as code, to
explore the relational connections between:
. . . facts, signals, rumours, news, mixed in with moods and emotional energies, enabling
agents to participate in an activity in which all behave as an individual and as an element of a
collectivity. One begins to wonder what the differences are, at the level of mechanisms, sepa-
rating the flock of birds and the traders on the market floor.
exclusion of the other senses and which captures bodies in a series of static,
frozen poses. This is contrasted with movement-vision which is aligned to pro-
prioception or muscular memory. This focus on the ‘whole body’ in movement
couples a visceral sensibility with vision and allows the registering of affect to
inform experience. This allows the intensity of an image, its affect, to be de-
coupled from its content – the image. In this sense (new) media are seen to work
primarily through affectivity (rather than through the interpretation of meaning
for example), and move us beyond representational thinking towards an engage-
ment with embodiment as we see in the work of Mark Hansen (2004), for
example. This shift to bodily affectivity is hugely important for work across
body-studies that is currently tied to the concept of body-image. This concept is
endlessly invoked to make sense of the often devastating impact of certain
celebrity images overlaid by the transformational logic of consumer culture. We
need to rethink the role of affect and body in relation to the image, and import
the body-without-an-image into our analyses so that we can pay attention to
these ineffable qualities transmitted through celebrity and consumer culture. As
Featherstone suggests, the old adage, ‘it’s not what you wear, but the way you
wear it’ may have far more scope for studying the relationship of the body to
consumer culture than our current obsession and fascination with image.
As we close this editorial article, it is clear that what this selection of articles
does is to open up and present an alternative discursive formation which offers
various challenges to the dominant hegemonic paradigms that have become central
to body-studies (this includes work on body-image and discursive approaches to
bodily matters, for example). While these paradigms remain important, we should
like to ask instead, what can different versions of bodily affectivity do in our
theorizing? This Special Issue stages that challenge as one that is very much trans-
disciplinary in spirit and that requires a creative and innovative development of
method. Some of the articles in this collection begin the important task of taking
this methodological innovation forward, or offering the parameters of what
might be important in shaping this task. It is left to our readers and contributors
to respond to the challenge, and we look forward to taking these debates further
in future and subsequent issues of the journal.
Notes
1. See TCS Annual Review, special section on ‘Precarity’, for a discussion of the concept of
‘affective labour’ (Theory, Culture & Society, December 2008, vol. 25 – particularly the article by Gill
and Pratt). Also see the discussion of affect in the UMAT Special Issue of TCS (December 2007, vol. 24
– particularly, Alison, Hansen, Boothroyd). Also see Lazzarato (2007) and Toscano (2007) for discus-
sions of affective labour and new vitalism.
26 ■ Body & Society Vol. 16 No. 1
2. The use of the ampersand in Body & Society refers to the both/and relationships between what
are often understood as separate entities, body and society. The editors understand these ‘entities’ as
always already thoroughly entangled processes.
3. This definition does some work, but one task that this Special Issue sets up is to see it as a starting
point for analysis and to begin to search beyond this hypothesis. The view of bodies as being defined
by their capacities to affect and be affected is broad enough to include magnets or heat which are
affected by other bodies. Affect of course is being used here in a different sense than simply having
an effect, but the definition – used by Massumi among others – appears not specific enough. It could
also be interpreted as some ‘thing’ that bodies have: a quality, a vital element – a capacity existing
independently of relationality, that is expressed through affect, or is a substratum for it.
4. In the case of an analysis or therapy situation, apart from the question of the staging or produc-
tion of the discourse, there is a translation of the analysand’s speech into the discourse of the analyst.
The translation in most perspectives is viewed as central to the curative process. The translated speech
is directed at the analysand, who is the beneficiary as well as the addressee. In the case of the processes
of translation being enacted with interviewer’s speech, this translation into an ethnographic or psycho-
logical/sociological vocabulary/register is for the benefit of the researcher; it is not addressed to the
interviewer/respondent, who generally does not see the translated product, or respond to it, or have
a say in it. The beneficiary is the researcher and the academic community. This raises important ethical
and methodological issues.
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28 ■ Body & Society Vol. 16 No. 1
Lisa Blackman is the new editor of Body & Society. She is a Reader in Media and Communications
at Goldsmiths, University of London. She has published three books: Hearing Voices: Embodiment
and Experience (2001, Free Association Books); Mass Hysteria: Critical Psychology and Media Studies
(2001, Palgrave co-authored with Valerie Walkerdine) and The Body: The Key Concepts (2008, Berg).
She is currently completing a book, Im/material Bodies: Affect, Relationality and the Problem of
Personality to be published by SAGE/TCS (forthcoming).
Couze Venn is Professor of Cultural Theory at Nottingham Trent University. His current research
interests include developing new approaches to affect and subjectivity, the critique of neoliberalism,
the development of alternatives to capitalism, postcolonial theory. He is managing editor and review
editor of Theory, Culture & Society and is an editorial board member of Body & Society. His publica-
tions include Changing the Subject (co-authored, Methuen, 1984 and Routledge, 1998), Occidentalism:
Modernity and Subjectivity (SAGE, 2000), The Postcolonial Challenge: Towards Alternative Worlds
(SAGE, 2006); chapters in books and articles in many journals including: Theory, Culture & Society,
Subjectivity, New Formations, New Identities, Parallax and Ideology & Consciousness of which he was
a founding editor. [email: vennco@googlemail.com]