Language is both at once, being entirely reabsorbed into the gaping depth. There is no longer anything to prevent propositions from falling back onto bodies and from mingling their sonorous elements with the body’s olfactory, gustatory, or digestive affects. Not only is there no longer any sense, but there is no longer any grammar or syntax either—nor, at the limit, are there any articulated syllabic, literal, or phonetic elements.

DELEUZE, GILLES: The Logic of Sense (1969)

  • Uploaded by
    Chan Chiara, Haushofer Oskar
  • Uploaded on
    200930