In Motion, At Rest: The Event of the Athletic Body
By (Author) Grant Farred
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
1st June 2014
United States
General
Non Fiction
Philosophy
Sport: general
796.019
Paperback
192
Width 127mm, Height 203mm, Spine 25mm
"In Motion, At Rest" takes up "the event" as a philosophical problem from a novel perspective. Grant Farred examines three infamous events in sport, arguing that theorizing the event through sport makes possible an entirely original way of thinking about it.
In the first event, Ron Artest committed a flagrant foul in a National Basketball Association game, which provoked fans to hurl both invectives and beer cups. Artest and some teammates then attacked the fans. Drawing from Alain Badiou, Farred suggests that this event extends far beyond Artest and into the actions of many others, including those of Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson, and Emmett Till. In the second event Eric Cantona--a professional footballer (soccer player)--was ejected from a game. On his way to the locker room a fan verbally assaulted him, and in response Cantona kicked the fan. Farred utilizes Gilles Deleuze's insights on cinema to theorize "the most famous kung-fu kick in football." In the third event, Zinedine Zidane, captain of the French national team, head butted an opposing player. Applying concepts from Jacques Derrida, Farred explores xenophobia and the politics of immigration.
Throughout, Farred shows how what was already inherent in the event is opened to new possibilities for understanding ontological being by thinking about sport philosophically.
"This is innovative work of the highest order, very smartly and incisively bringing onto the field two teams that very seldom meet in inter-league play: the philosophers and the sociologists of sports. But in these pages there are also crucial interventions staged in cultural studies, race theory, globalization discourse, and media studies. In Motion, At Rest is a book that speaks to many audiences, without giving up its singular focus on the athletic body."Jeffrey Nealon, Penn State University
"As subtle and illuminating as any of Deleuzes disquisitions on the Wlms he discusses in his Cinema books."Cultural Critique
Grant Farred teaches at Cornell University. He is the author of four books, including Whats My Name Black Vernacular Intellectuals (Minnesota, 2003).