A butterfly is like another butterfly. A butterfly is also like a leaf and at the same time like a paper airplane, an owl鈥檚 face, a scholar flying from book to book. The most disparate things approach one another in a butterfly, the sort of dense nodule of likeness that Roger Caillois once proposed calling a 鈥渂izarre-privileged item.鈥 In response, critical theorist Paul North proposes a spiritual exercise: imagine a universe made up solely of likenesses. There are no things, only traits acting according to the law of series, here and there a thick overlap that appears 鈥渂izarre.鈥
Centuries of thought have fixated on the concept of difference. This book offers a theory that begins from likeness, where, at any instant, a vast array of series proliferates and remote regions come into contact. Bizarre-Privileged Items in the Universe follows likenesses as they traverse physics and the physical universe; evolution and evolutionary theory; psychology and the psyche; sociality, language, and art. Divergent sources from an eccentric history help give shape to a new trans-science, 鈥渉omeotics.鈥
Paul North is Professor of German at Yale University. He is the author of The Problem of Distraction and The Yield: Kafka鈥檚 Atheological Reformation.
鈥淟ikeness looks like a relation that is both too obvious and too 鈥榖izarre,鈥 likely because it has been used and abused by a few lyric and surrealist poets. As a result, dogmatists and suspicious minds have held it in low esteem. Paul North overturns all these prejudices in a sort of tractatus poetico-philosophicus鈥攁t once free and rigorous, impertinent and lucid. Here, Darwin finally meets Caillois; Plotinus finally illuminates Arcimboldo; Peirce and Wittgenstein finally converse with Bergson, Reverdy, and Benjamin. The book gives us luminously to understand how likenesses arise, act, and proliferate. How they aren鈥檛 what we once thought; how they are a matter of noncoincidence, of multiplicity, of happenings; how they allow for the possibility of a morphology, a semiotics, a history, and a theory of social linkages. A 鈥榞rammatology鈥 of difference and of repetition, Bizarre-Privileged Items in the Universe is a philosophical tour de force.鈥濃擥eorges Didi-Huberman, professor at the 脡cole des hautes 茅tudes en sciences sociales and author of more than fifty works on the theory and history of images
鈥淧aul North鈥檚 exploration of the logic of likeness is unlike anything I have read, with its admirable mode of moving between so many unexpected regions and objects. It performs or enacts (perhaps we should say, borrowing a verb coined in these dazzling pages, that it enlikens) what it analyzes: the book connects domains that we thought were as far away from one another as Darwin鈥檚 notebooks and Surrealism; the Plotinian universe and Wittgenstein鈥檚 duckrabbit; Arcimboldo鈥檚 composite vegetable portraits and Gabriel Tarde鈥檚 sociology.鈥濃擯eter Szendy, David Herlihy Professor of Comparative Literature and Humanities at Brown University
鈥淚t is very rare that one comes across a book like Paul North鈥檚 Bizarre-Privileged Items in the Universe. I鈥檓 tempted to say that it constitutes itself a 鈥榖izarre-privileged item in the universe,鈥 in the best possible meaning of this formulation. It is an extraordinary, and extraordinarily well-written treatise that takes the reader through numerous different facets of likeness, following its complex yet airy texture, its multiple refractions, arrows and overlaps, by engaging in a smooth, tender, almost comforting flow of ongoing reflection. Big, extremely significant, and very far reaching claims are being made all along the way, in a manner that in no way imposes itself upon the reader, but rather gently takes her hand and proposes a joint and fascinating journey through the strange wonderland of likeness. I have no hesitation in saying that this is one of the most original and important books written in the past decades.鈥濃擜lenka Zupan膷i膷, author of The Shortest Shadow: Nietzsche鈥檚 Philosophy of the Two and What IS Sex?