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Literature and Materialisms sheds light on the current new wave of
materialisms and assesses the impact on literary theory and
criticism. It maps the similarities and differences between
speculative realism, object-oriented philosophy, and vitalism. A
genealogy of materialisms, vitalisms, empiricisms, and realist
approaches - from Heraclitus to Badiou, including Lucretius,
Spinoza, Marx, Althusser, Barad, Spivak, Deleuze, Bennett, Harman,
and other contemporary thinkers - puts these new trends into
perspective. This book investigates the relations between
literature - from Marquis de Sade to objectivist poetry - and
materialism and analyses the material aspects of literature, its
structure and texture, its commodification and its capacity to
resist market imperatives. It explores how literary style might be
understood as a mediation between the 'immaterial' and the concrete
features of a text. This volume provides students and academics
with an accessible overview of the study of literature and
materialism.
Literature and Materialisms sheds light on the current new wave of
materialisms and assesses the impact on literary theory and
criticism. It maps the similarities and differences between
speculative realism, object-oriented philosophy, and vitalism. A
genealogy of materialisms, vitalisms, empiricisms, and realist
approaches - from Heraclitus to Badiou, including Lucretius,
Spinoza, Marx, Althusser, Barad, Spivak, Deleuze, Bennett, Harman,
and other contemporary thinkers - puts these new trends into
perspective. This book investigates the relations between
literature - from Marquis de Sade to objectivist poetry - and
materialism and analyses the material aspects of literature, its
structure and texture, its commodification and its capacity to
resist market imperatives. It explores how literary style might be
understood as a mediation between the 'immaterial' and the concrete
features of a text. This volume provides students and academics
with an accessible overview of the study of literature and
materialism.
This book offers a manifesto for a radical existentialism aiming to
regenerate the place of the outside that contemporary theory
underestimates. Neyrat calls this outside "atopia": not utopia, a
dreamt place out of the world where everything would be perfect,
but atopia, the internal outside that is at the core of every
being. Atopia is neither an object that an "object-oriented
ontology" would be able to formalize, nor the matter that "new
materialisms" could identify. Atopia is what constitutes the
existence of any object or subject, its singularity or more
precisely its "eccentricity." Etymologically, to exist means "to be
outside" and the book argues that every entity is outside, thrown
in the world, wandering without any ontological anchor. In this
regard, a radicalized existentialism does not privilege human
beings (as Sartre and Heidegger did), but considers existence as a
universal condition that concerns every being. It is important to
offer a radical existentialism because the current denial of the
outside is politically, and aesthetically, damaging. Only an
atopian philosophy-a bizarre, extravagant, heretic philosophy-can
care for our fear of the outside. For therapeutic element, a
radical existentialism favors everything that challenges the
compact immanence in which we are trapped, losing capacity to
imagine political alternatives. To sustain these alternatives, the
book identifies the atopia as a condition of the possibility to
break immanence and analyze these breaks in human and animal
subjectivity, language, politics and metaphysics.
Winner, Grand Prize, French Voices Award for Excellence in
Publication and Translation The Space Age is over? Not at all! A
new planet has appeared: Earth. In the age of the Anthropocene, the
Earth is a post-natural planet that can be remade at will,
controlled and managed thanks to the prowess of geoengineering.
This new imaginary is also accompanied by a new kind of
power-geopower-that takes the entire Earth, in its social,
biological and geophysical dimensions, as an object of knowledge,
intervention, and governmentality. In short, our rising awareness
that we have destroyed our planet has simultaneously provided us
not with remorse or resolve but with a new fantasy: that the
Anthropocene delivers an opportunity to remake our terrestrial
environment thanks to the power of technology. Such is the position
we find ourselves in, when proposals for reengineering the earth's
ecosystems and geosystems are taken as the only politically
feasible answer to ecological catastrophe. Yet far from being
merely the fruit of geo-capitalism, this new grand narrative of
geopower has also been activated by theorists of the constructivist
turn-ecomodernist, postenvironmentalist, accelerationist-who have
likewise called into question the great divide between nature and
culture. With the collapse of this divide, a cyborg, hybrid,
flexible nature has been built, an impoverished nature that does
not exist without being performed by technologies that proliferate
within the space of human needs and capitalist imperatives.
Underneath this performative vision resides a hidden anaturalism
denying all otherness to nature and the Earth, no longer by
externalizing it as a thing to be dominated, but by radically
internalizing it as something to be digested. Constructivist
ecology thus finds itself in no position to confront the
geoconstructivist project, with its claim that there is no nature
and its aim to replace Earth with Earth 2.0. Against both
positions, Neyrat stakes out the importance of the unconstructable
Earth. Against the fusional myth of technology over nature, but
without returning to the division between nature and culture, he
proposes an "ecology of separation" that acknowledges the wild,
subtractive capacity of nature. Against the capitalist,
technocratic delusion of earth as a constructible object, but
equally against an organicism marked by unacknowledged traces of
racism and sexism, Neyrat shows what it means to appreciate Earth
as an unsubstitutable becoming: a traject that cannot be replicated
in a laboratory. Underway for billions of years, withdrawing into
the most distant past and the most inaccessible future, Earth
escapes the hubris of all who would remake and master it. This
remarkable book, which will be of interest to those across the
humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences, from theorists
to shapers of policy, recasts the earth as a singular trajectory
that invites humans to turn political ecology into a geopolitics.
This book offers a manifesto for a radical existentialism aiming to
regenerate the place of the outside that contemporary theory
underestimates. Neyrat calls this outside "atopia": not utopia, a
dreamt place out of the world where everything would be perfect,
but atopia, the internal outside that is at the core of every
being. Atopia is neither an object that an "object-oriented
ontology" would be able to formalize, nor the matter that "new
materialisms" could identify. Atopia is what constitutes the
existence of any object or subject, its singularity or more
precisely its "eccentricity." Etymologically, to exist means "to be
outside" and the book argues that every entity is outside, thrown
in the world, wandering without any ontological anchor. In this
regard, a radicalized existentialism does not privilege human
beings (as Sartre and Heidegger did), but considers existence as a
universal condition that concerns every being. It is important to
offer a radical existentialism because the current denial of the
outside is politically, and aesthetically, damaging. Only an
atopian philosophy-a bizarre, extravagant, heretic philosophy-can
care for our fear of the outside. For therapeutic element, a
radical existentialism favors everything that challenges the
compact immanence in which we are trapped, losing capacity to
imagine political alternatives. To sustain these alternatives, the
book identifies the atopia as a condition of the possibility to
break immanence and analyze these breaks in human and animal
subjectivity, language, politics and metaphysics.
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