Things gesture world.
By implicating a beyond, things gesture. The gesture is not confined
to its performer— it is itself a performance. And this means it is always
beyond what carries it out. Gesture is itself the transition into this “out.”
Gesture is the carrying, the carriage or bearing (comportment), of this
transition beyond oneself. The things that gesture world hold it up. As
we have seen in considering the hinting divinities, the bearing of gesture
is a bearing that gives no ground, but instead is a “counter- bearing and
conveying [Entgegentragen und Zutrag],” that is, gesture is an interface, as
is the thing. There would be no world without
things. They are the pinions of world, the axes upon which it turns. The
movement of the thing beyond itself effulges forth a space of relation.
Relations stream away from things, through the cracks of the four, along
the avenues of the four, billowing out from the thing. In so doing, these
relations articulate world.
P. 300
From
The Fourfold, Andrew J. Mitchell.
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