Abstract
The topic of this paper is a theory of the organism as subject. It is an ascription of subjectivity to organic bodies. I restrict my analysis, in this presentation, to the question of temporality; particularly, to the way individual bodies produce out of their own metabolic activity the temporal field with which they interact. I structure this discussion by way of an elucidation of Gilles Deleuze’s concept of the larval subject as it emerges out of his Difference and Repetition. I begin with the nature of repetition and time, move into an explication of organic rhythm, and unify these reflections in a reflection on the nature of organismic temporality. In terms moreproperly Deleuzian, I claim that out of the passive temporal syntheses constitutive of the present emerge the rhythmic contractions of the larval self and the polyrhythmic network of the organismic subject. In drawing on Deleuze in this way, I hope to achieve a novel and fruitful perspective on the individual nature of bodily time that makes credible an ascription of subjectivity, a concept traditionally afforded only to the human, to all living bodies.