It is a rare book that can be, at once, so seismically unsettling and yet so sumptuously composed. The world is breaking, broken. By deftly tracking among and between the cracks that are everywhere – in literature, philosophy, dance, architecture, the earth’s surface and substrata – Rick Dolphijn’s meditation should be profoundly melancholic (and often it is) but it arrives with the Spinozist grace of a benediction.

Gregory J. Seigworth, Professor of Digital Communication & Cultural Studies, Millersville University, USA

Rather than choosing to be a polarizing book by virtue of veering off to the extremes of posthumanism or humanism, Rick Dolphijn’s <i>The Philosophy of Matter</i> is a much more subtle and mindful exercise in ameliorating and mending the great schism between the two. Through a wealth of literary, cultural, and theoretical cases and arguments, Dolphijn advocates a critical humanism that rises from the ashes of the old form of humanism through the combined forces of imagination and critique afforded to it by an account of nature that enriches the human and its interactions with the world of which it is a part. In doing so, such an account of nature actively reinvents not only what the non-human can be but also what we historically consider the human to be.

Reza Negarestani, author of "Intelligence and Spirit"

A concise yet focused book delving into the relationship between the turbulent life we currently live and the planet.

Digital University Magazine, Utrecht University

The Philosophy of Matter is a journey in thinking through the material fate of the earth itself; its surfaces and undercurrrents, ecologies, environments and irreparable cracks.

With figures such as Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze and Michel Serres as philosophical guides and writings on New Materialism, Posthumanism and Affect Theory as intellectual context, Rick Dolphijn proposes a radical rethinking of some of the basic themes of philosophy: subjectivity, materiality, body (both human and otherwise) and the act of living. This rethink is a work of imagination and meditation in order to conceive of “another earth for another people”. It is a homage to courageous thinking that dares to question the religious, capitalist and humanist realities of the day.

A poetic philosophy of how to live in troubling times when even the earth beneath us feels unstable, Dolphijn offers a way to think about the world with depth, honesty and glimpses of hope.

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Introduction

Part I
IMAGINING THE UNDERCURRENT
I Don’t Know Where This Is Going but I Know Where to Begin...
The History Of Cartesianism Is The History Of Critique
Why our world demands a different form of thinking
Rewriting Humanism
Imagination Is What Matters… It Nurtures Everything

Part II
THIS IS NOT THE EARTH!
The Philosopher is the Geometer
The Deserted…
The Pathologists Of The Earth
Become A Target

Part III
I CAN SEE SOMETHING
I Am Not A Person, Right?
Shadows In Shadows
The Cracks Of The Contemporary
The Wound (I Was Born To Embody)

Part IV
GEOMETER, SHOW ME A NEW EARTH
The Geometer Starts From A Physics Beyond Critique
The Geometers First Axiom: A Body Is That Which Folds
The Geometer Maps That Which Is Savage, Irregular, Alive
The Geometer Maps How Art Objects
Earth… You Are Everywhere

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A philosophical meditation on the fate of the earth drawing upon contemporary ideas in new materialism, posthumanism and the environmental humanities
Timely topic - a philosophical meditation on a destroyed earth will be of interest to those studying or concerned about climate change, radical ecology and posthuman ethics

Theory is back! The vitality of critical thinking in the world today is palpable, as is a spirit of insurgency that sustains it. Theoretical practice has exploded with renewed energy in media, society, the arts and the corporate world. New generations of critical ‘studies’ areas have grown alongside the classical radical epistemologies of the 1970s: gender, feminist, queer, race, postcolonial and subaltern studies, cultural studies, film, television and media studies.
This series aims to present cartographic accounts of emerging critical theories and to reflect the vitality and inspirational force of on-going theoretical debates.

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350211902
Publisert
2021-08-12
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Vekt
240 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
136 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
176

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Rick Dolphijn is Associate Professor at Utrecht University, the Netherlands; an Honorary Professor at Hong Kong University (2017-2023), Hong Kong; and a Visiting Professor at the University of Barcelona (2019-2020), Spain. He is author of Foodscapes: towards a Deleuzian Ethics of Consumption (2004), New Materialism: Interviews and Cartographies (with Iris van der Tuin) (2012) and edited (with Rosi Braidotti) This Deleuzian Century: Art, Activism, Life (2014) and Philosophy After Nature (2017). His most recent book is Michel Serres and the Crises of the Contemporary (Bloomsbury 2018).