Posthuman ecologies : complexity and process after Deleuze

Bibliographic Information

Posthuman ecologies : complexity and process after Deleuze

edited by Rosi Braidotti and Simone Bignall

Rowman & Littlefield International, c2019

  • : pbk
  • : cloth

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The devolved and dispersed character of human agency and moral responsibility in the contemporary condition appears linked with the deepening global trauma of 'inhumanism' as a paradox of the Anthropocene. Reclaiming human agency and accountability appears crucial for collective resistance to the unprecedented state of environmental and social collapse resulting from the inhumanity of contemporary capitalist geopolitics and biotechnologies of control. Understanding the potential for such resistance in the posthuman condition requires urgent new thinking about the nature of human influence in complex interactional systems, and about the nature of such systems when conceived in non-anthropocentric way. Through specific readings and uses of Deleuze's conceptual apparatus, this volume examines the operation of human-actioned systems as complex and heterogeneous arenas of affection and accountability. This exciting collection extends non-humanist concepts for understanding reality, agency and interaction in dynamic ecologies of reciprocal determination and influence. The outcome is a vital new theorisation of human scope, responsibility and potential in the posthuman condition.

Table of Contents

1. Rosi Braidotti and Simone Bignall - Introduction: posthuman systems / 2. Iris Van der Tuin - Deleuze and diffraction / 3. Jussi Parikka - Cartographies of environmental arts / 4. Andrej Radman - Involutionary architecture: unyoking coherence from congruence / 5. Elizabeth de Freitas - Love of learning: amorous and fatal / 6. James Williams - Time and the posthuman / 7. Sean Bowden - 'Becoming-equal to the act': the temporal structure of action and agential responsibility / 8. Suzanne McCullagh - Heterogeneous collectivities and the capacity to act: conceptualising nonhumans in the political sphere / 9. Simone Bignall and Daryle Rigney - Indigeneity, posthumanism and nomad thought: transforming colonial ecologies / 10. Thomas Nail - Kinopolitics: borders in motion / 11. Gregory Flaxman - Out of control: from political economy to political ecology / 12. Jon Roffe - Economic systems and the problematic character of price / 13. Edward Mussawir - A modification in the subject of right: Deleuze, jurisprudence and the diagram of bees in Roman law / 14. Myra Hird and Kathryn Yusoff - Lines of shite: microbial-mineral chatter in the Anthropocene

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