The Politicization of the Event in Deleuze’s Thought Alcalá Rodríguez, Francisco Javier Deleuze event politics ethics change assemblage This article attempts to elucidate the Deleuzian philosophy of the event between The Logic of Sense and A Thousand Plateaus, where it acquires clearly political nuances. With regard to The Logic of Sense, I show that (i) it takes up the definition of the event of Difference and Repetition, identifying it with that redistribution of pre-individual singularities or individuating differences at the level of the univocal being which defines the conditions of problems; (ii) the event is henceforth also the instance that makes possible the “communication” of the heterogeneous series of bodies and propositions from which the production of sense in language follows; and (iii) the counter-effectuation should be understood in this book as an ethics of the event. With regard to A Thousand Plateaus, I emphasize (i) the “return” to The Logic of Sense that the concept of assemblage entails, (ii) the reformulation of the notion of event that takes place in the new theoretical framework, and (iii) that of the counter-effectuation, which must henceforth be understood as a politics of the event. 2024-06-10T06:57:51Z 2024-06-10T06:57:51Z 2024-06-06 journal article Alcalá, F.J. The Politicization of the Event in Deleuze’s Thought. Philosophies 2024, 9, 82 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/92438 https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9030082 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ open access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional