...the reanimated body doesn’t fall to pieces; it revives, implying a strange new manner of coordination. As with the plastic line, this reanimated or re-assembled body renews our impression of an animating force that is not inside the body but working through it – an inside that is the fold of an outside.*


* Lamarre, Thomas. “Animation and Animism.” In Animals, Animality, and Literature, Eds. Bruce Boehrer, Molly Hand and Brian Massumi., 284–300. Cambridge University Press, 2018: 297.