In an age of perpetual acceleration, this book asks what it means to slow down intensively, not as nostalgia or inertia, but as a strategy of creation and survival. Moving from the myth of Deleuze’s “accelerationism” to a new reading of his ethics and politics, it explores how slowness can recompose bodies, thoughts, and collectives. With chapters on Kafka’s “idiots,” the cow as a figure of planetary resistance, and the catatonic as the last refuge of refusal, Deleuze and Slowness offers a strikingly contemporary Deleuze, one who resists the present by slowing it down.