JOURNAL ARTICLE
Webbed Attachments: Psychedelic Lessons from the Multiverse.
Published In: Theory & Event, 2025, v. 28, n. 2. P. 175 1 of 3
Database: Academic Search Ultimate 2 of 3
Authored By: Fawaz, Ramzi 3 of 3
Abstract
This essay explores how the fundamental qualities of the psychedelic experience—including heightened affective intensity, the disorganization of the ego, and a sense of cosmic interconnectedness with the universe—offers a hopeful alternative to contemporary left-wing identitarianism. This is a widely popular political logic that associates the pursuit of social justice with the passionate defense of seemingly coherent, bounded marginalized subjectivities that are depressively defined by their perpetual subordination to rigid hierarchies of power. Building on Wendy Brown's classic formulation of "wounded attachment," I argue that in a painful paradox, the obsessive attachment to cultural identity as the vehicle for articulating marginalized subjects' bids for political freedom, often masks the underlying desire to commune freely across our differences. Against this logic, I turn to the distinctly psychedelic animated films, Spider-Man: Into (2018) and Across the Spider-Verse (2023), which use the titular superhero's signature "webbing" as a visual theory of attachment and affiliation across infinite phenotypical, temperamental, and stylistic differences, or radically distinct forms of life. By visually and conceptually fracturing Spider-Man's seemingly coherent ego across time and space, the film presents the fictional concept of the multiverse as a distinctly psychedelic figure for conceiving differences as an endless web of relations forged between multiple dimensions rather than rigidly formed identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Additional Information
- Source:Theory & Event. 2025/04, Vol. 28, Issue 2, p175
- Document Type:Article
- Subject Area:Biography
- Publication Date:2025
- ISSN:2572-6633
- DOI:10.1353/tae.2025.a956274
- Accession Number:184329110
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