
12:58
super loud

13:04
all better

22:44
Welcome all.

26:44
Hi Mary Jo - happy to be here!

34:29
The Spectralities Reader

34:31
https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/the-spectralities-reader-9781441138606/

49:37
Thank you, Byron! Exceptionally lucid, as always!!

01:02:16
Dr. Idria, that was so moving and layered and brilliant, thank you for your work! Please share the links to your letters if you don’t mind.

01:02:50
exceptional presentations this morning, thank you,

01:03:35
Thank you for sharing your personal experience of trauma, and writing to ghosts as a way to heal. I’m so appreciative of your openness and willingness to share.

01:03:53
very moving, as we enter into this space between… thank you

01:25:29
Thank you. You all make these ideas very comprehensible … poetic but lucid and with real historical and psychological referents. How I translate into my own language is the dynamic collective unconscious (with historical realities like slavery and genocide collectively repressed, which facilitates individual denial … though producing spectres that can sometimes become re-embodied and alive again). I'm interested in how the denial might set the stage for re-animation (perhaps by preventing insight).

01:34:18
This discussion is reminding me of a particular Hidden Brain podcast exploring this idea of seeing, hearing and speaking with imaginary bodies or apparitions. Thought I would share it here: https://www.npr.org/2020/01/27/799963509/secret-friends-tapping-into-the-power-of-imagination

01:42:57
Could you elaborate also on the association between hunting poverty, a life expectation

01:45:10
Thanks very much to the panel for this very nice discussion.

01:46:28
About the article I quoted: Lincoln, Martha and Bruce Lincoln, 2015. "Toward a Critical Hauntology: Bare Afterlife and the Ghosts of Ba Chuc", Comparative Studies in Society and History, 57:191-220.

01:46:49
Thanks Andrea. I want to find that now.

01:54:44
These presentations - which are astounding - bring me back to Amelie's work in Mind in Action.

01:58:52
outstanding presentation

01:59:26
thank you for these beautiful presentations!

02:05:34
the notion of subjectivy in psychoanlisis is a dichotomic one. \it Works with concious and inconcious. I would suggest a phenomenological perspective based in Merleau-Ponty's perspective to think about this notion of subjevitivety Sadeq.

02:06:20
We can find this perspective nowdays in phenomenological psychopathology. Loved your presentation1

02:08:16
so sorry I have to leave. thank you everyone!

02:08:55
Thank you for these powerful presentations, which illuminate the immediacy and urgency of haunting as a frame for engagement with suffering and for action in our everyday lives. So sorry that I need to leave! Thank you, all.

02:09:25
I like the intervention about technology and haunting and ghost

02:09:50
Thank you, virginia. Yes indeed. Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty are two significant influences on what I’m doing.

02:11:10
For instance watching TV, movie etc. how these activities relate to haunting ?

02:11:58
Christophe, the last chapter of my book is on technology and hauntology.

02:14:20
thanks Sadeq i would like to read it

02:14:34
This is fascinating, thank you. I wonder if interacting with ghosts is a way for survivors of trauma to heal by making meaning and having control/power through things like exorcism etc.

02:14:58
could you share the title and I can buy it?

02:15:33
This was was a very enriching Seminar.. and timely too.. happy Halloween!

02:15:38
this was such a wonderful series of presentations. thank you all!

02:15:56
Thanks to Byron, Mary-Jo and the others who made this possible.

02:16:00
Great seminar!

02:16:02
Thank you, all, for the wonderful presentations - and rich ideas involved!

02:16:13
Thank you! Greetings from İstanbul

02:16:20
Wonderful seminar!

02:16:42
is the h in hauntology silent?

02:16:44
Wonderful! Thank you so much

02:17:20
the h is silent in French but not in English

02:17:52
oh cool. thanks

02:18:27
thank you very much

02:19:35
Wonderful and deep conversation. Thank you all. I wonder about the cultural specificity of haunting, how local communities relate to such haunting, both make it present and respond or refuse to respond...

02:22:42
Michael, I would like to hear more about hauntology and technology.

02:23:03
thank you for another great talk. Michele

02:30:22
Thank you all for your generous comments. Sorry I have to leave earlier. Hoping to follow the rest of this wonderful discussion from the recording. Hugs and see you all next Friday!

02:31:48
Thank you so much, everyone! Fantastic and generative!

02:32:53
Thank you all! Extremely compelling

02:40:30
Thank you, all. I need to leave now. I hope to join in on the conversation again soon.

02:41:08
Great to see you, Bob.

02:47:26
thinking on what haunts us seems fruitful as a counter point to trauma and post trauma.... The conversation has led me to think about these notions as similar at times but they have different histories, different meanings and call for similar yet different reflections...

02:48:38
I address some of the questions in a paper called Haunted Metaphor, Transmitted Affect: The Pantemporality of Subjective Experience

02:49:58
Good point, Yehuda. It is as if trauma has become a crypt, and maybe hauntings allow a decrypting

02:54:03
great point, Yehuda! Also, raises the point of global sense of trauma vs the individual experience.

02:57:28
Many thanks for the interesting discussion!

02:58:58
outstanding session

02:59:13
Thanks have a great weekend

02:59:15
Thank you!

02:59:32
We all are hoping for a new world, and new present tense.

02:59:44
Yes Paul!

02:59:49
Hoping for an effective exorcism!