By a Non-specific Linguistics: The Ancestral Restlessness of the Voice
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Abstract
This article analyzes the matter of the voice from two central notions: articulation and ancestry; and we propose an insubordinate, imagined, undisciplined, unspecific linguistics. From the reflections of Agamben, De Certeau, Derrida, Saussure and Zumthor, this text discusses the belonging (human / non-human) of the voice. From the hypothesis that the voice is infinite (Agamben), we discuss the notion of articulation from the theories of Saussure and Rousseau (read by Derrida). We postulate that the voice is an ancestor of the future (Didi-Huberman and Coccia) and we approach the question of ancestry from the theories of Brisset and Darwin. The main objective is to discuss the aforementioned notions and conclude with the proposal of an indiscipline that considers the non-specificity of the voice.
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