This collection is both timely and important. The essays gathered here deploy many of the concepts and modes of thinking that Michel Serres has developed through his prodigious body of work, to make sense of the conditions of crisis, economic, environmental and political, that we currently inhabit. They take their impetus from the living and loving sweep of Serres's work, as they range between nature, language, mathematics, knowledge, technology and the senses. Their manner of thinking with, rather than merely about Serres, means that they are able to move beyond the parched, penurious work of critique to the imagination of new ways of thinking, feeling and being.
Steven Connor, Grace 2 Professor of English, University of Cambridge, UK
In a collection of 21st century applications for Michel Serres' social and theoretical modelling, Rick Dolphijn has brought together a range of thinkers exercising the dynamic priorities of Serres' thinking, providing us relational strategies and plausible analogues for our time. This collection of writings and interviews helps all of us into the conversations that Serres' vision makes possible.
- Craig Smith, Associate Professor, School of Art and Art History, University of Florida, USA,
This important book admirably seeks not only to understand Serres but to use his thought to challenge and re-frame some of today’s most pressing social and philosophical debates, from the body and materialism to ecology and the future of the university. Its compelling interventions leave the reader with an acute sense of the contemporary urgency of thinking both with and through Serres. Both scholars familiar with the breadth of Serres’s work and those new to the significance and relevance his timely thought will find much of interest and, more importantly, of use in these pages.
Christopher Watkin, Senior Lecturer in French Studies, Monash University, Australia
Michel Serres captures the urgencies of our time; from the digital revolution to the ecological crisis to the future of the university, the crises that code the world today are addressed in an accessible, affirmative and remarkably original analysis in his thought.
This volume is the first to engage with the philosophy of Michel Serres, not by writing ‘about’ it, but by writing ‘with’ it. This is done by expanding upon the urgent themes that Serres works on; by furthering his materialism, his emphasis on communication and information, his focus on the senses, and the role of mathematics in thought. His famous concepts, such as the parasite, ‘amis de viellesse’, and the algorithm are applied in 21st century situations. With contributions from an international and interdisciplinary team of authors, these writings tackle the crises of today and affirm the contemporary relevance of Serres’ philosophy.
Introduction: Procedural Thinking by Rick Dolphijn, Utrecht University, the Netherlands
Chapter 1. The Virtue of Sensibility - David Webb, Staffordshire University, UK
Chapter 2. Cosmoliteracy and Anthropography, Vera Bühlmann, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Chapter 3. The Mathematical Anamneses - Lucie Kim-Chi Mercier, Kingston University London, UK)
Chapter 4. Kill is kiss, words are rats - Eugenie Brinkema, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Chapter 5. The Exogenesis of Light - Matteo Pasquinelli, Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design, Germany
Chapter 6. Scintillant @ the University of Angelic Invention, Gray Kochhar-Lindgren, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Chapter 7. The World, the Mat(t)er of Thought, Rick Dolphijn, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Chapter 8. The Grace of Extinction, Patricia McCormack, Anglia Ruskin University, UK
Chapter 9. A New Culture that Suits the World, Interview with Michel Serres by Janina Pigaht, Documentary Filmmaker and Rick Dolphijn, Utrecht University, The Netherlands, translated by Joeri Visser, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Index
Serres is a radically disruptive thinker with respect to the history of philosophy, the practice of philosophy and the future of enquiry. His writings stretch from the sixties of the last century to the present moment.
This book series provides discussions of both of the various stages and aspects of his own writings, and extend the discussion to developing responses to contemporary questions and problems of and for philosophy including mathematics, our relationship with technology and the ecological crisis.
Series editorial board:
Professor Claire Colebrook, Edwin Erle Spark Professor of English, Penn State University, PA, USA
Professor Steve Connor, GraceTwo Professor of English, University of Cambridge, UK
Dr Diane Morgan, Senior Lecturer, School of Fine Art, History of Art, and Cultural Studies, University of Leeds, UK
Professor Dan Smith, Department of Philosophy, College of Liberal Arts. Purdue University, IL, USA
Professor Iris van der Tuin, Utrecht University, Netherlands
Dr. Chris Watkin, Senior Lecturer, French Studies, Monash, Melbourne Australia