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Reified Life - Speculative Capital and the Ahuman Condition (Paperback)
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Reified Life - Speculative Capital and the Ahuman Condition (Paperback)
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Reified Life addresses the most pressing political question of the
21st century: what forms of life are free and what forms are
perceived legally and economically as surplus or expendable, human
and otherwise. The 2008 economic crisis solidified the dominion of
neoliberal and financial capital to organize human societies much
to the detriment of the world's populations. Reified Life theorizes
the dangerous social implications of a posthuman future, whereby
human agency is secondary to algorithmic processes, digital
protocols, speculative financial instruments, and nonhuman market
and technological forces. Employing new readings of Deleuze,
Guattari, Foucault, Marx, Vico, Gramsci, Berardi, and Gilbert
Simondon, Narkunas contends that it is premature to speak of a
posthuman or inhuman future, or employ an 'ism, given how dynamic
and contingent human practices and their material figurations can
be. Over several chapters he diagnoses the rise of "market humans,"
the instrumentalization of culture to decide the life worth living
along utilitarian categories, and the varied ways human rights and
humanitarianism actually throw members of the species like refugees
outside the human order. To combat this, Reified Life argues
against Reified Life calls to abandon the human and humanism, and
instead proposes the ahuman to think alongside the human, what
philosopher Gilbert Simondon calls the transindividuation of
ontogentic processes rather than subjectivity. To aid the
"figurating animal," Reified Life elaborates speculative fictions
as critical mechanisms for envisioning alternative futures and
freedoms from the domineering forces of speculative capital, whose
fictions have become our realities. Narkunas offers, to that end, a
novel interpretation of the post-anthropocentric turn in the
humanities by linking the diminished centrality of humanism to the
waning dominion of nation-states over their populations and the
intensification of financial capitalism, which reconfigures
politics along economic categories of risk management.
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