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A reexamination of key Frankfurt School thinkers -- Benjamin,
Adorno, Horkheimer, Marcuse -- in the light of contemporary theory
and cultural studies across the disciplines, Rethinking the
Frankfurt School asks what consequences such a rethinking might
have for study of the Frankfurt School on its own terms.
In our age of ecological disaster, this book joins the growing
philosophical literature on vegetable life to ask how our present
debates about biopower and animal studies change if we take plants
as a linchpin for thinking about biopolitics. Logically enough, the
book uses animal studies as a way into the subject, but it does so
in unexpected ways. Upending critical approaches of biopolitical
regimes, it argues that it is plants rather than animals that are
the forgotten and abjected forms of life under humanist biopower.
Indeed, biopolitical theory has consistently sidestepped the issue
of vegetable life, and more recently, has been outright hostile to
it. Provocatively, Jeffrey T. Nealon wonders whether animal
studies, which has taken the "inventor" of biopower himself to task
for speciesism, has not misread Foucault, thereby managing to
extend humanist biopower rather than to curb its reach. Nealon is
interested in how and why this is the case. Plant Theory turns to
several other thinkers of the high theory generation in an effort
to imagine new futures for the ongoing biopolitical debate.
In our age of ecological disaster, this book joins the growing
philosophical literature on vegetable life to ask how our present
debates about biopower and animal studies change if we take plants
as a linchpin for thinking about biopolitics. Logically enough, the
book uses animal studies as a way into the subject, but it does so
in unexpected ways. Upending critical approaches of biopolitical
regimes, it argues that it is plants rather than animals that are
the forgotten and abjected forms of life under humanist biopower.
Indeed, biopolitical theory has consistently sidestepped the issue
of vegetable life, and more recently, has been outright hostile to
it. Provocatively, Jeffrey T. Nealon wonders whether animal
studies, which has taken the "inventor" of biopower himself to task
for speciesism, has not misread Foucault, thereby managing to
extend humanist biopower rather than to curb its reach. Nealon is
interested in how and why this is the case. Plant Theory turns to
several other thinkers of the high theory generation in an effort
to imagine new futures for the ongoing biopolitical debate.
A powerful new examination of the performative that asks "what's
next?" for this well-worn concept From its humble origins in J. L.
Austin's speech-act theory of the 1950s, the performative has grown
to permeate wildly diverse scholarly fields, ranging from
deconstruction and feminism to legal theory and even theories about
the structure of matter. Here Jeffrey T. Nealon discovers how the
performative will remain vital in the twenty-first century, arguing
that it was never merely concerned with linguistic meaning but
rather constitutes an insight into the workings of immaterial
force. Fates of the Performative takes a deep dive into this
"performative force" to think about the continued power and
relevance of this wide-ranging concept. Offering both a history of
the performative's mutations and a diagnosis of its present state,
Nealon traces how it has been deployed by key writers in the past
sixty years, including foundational thinkers like Jacques Derrida,
Eve Kosofsky Sedgewick, and Judith Butler; contemporary theorists
such as Thomas Piketty and Antonio Negri; and the "conceptual
poetry" of Kenneth Goldsmith. Ultimately, Nealon's inquiry is
animated by one powerful question: what's living and what's dead in
performative theory? In deconstructing the reaction against the
performative in current humanist thought, Fates of the Performative
opens up important conversations about systems theory, animal
studies, object-oriented ontology, and the digital humanities.
Nealon's stirring appeal makes a necessary declaration of the
performative's continued power and relevance at a time of
neoliberal ascendancy.
A powerful new examination of the performative that asks "what's
next?" for this well-worn concept From its humble origins in J. L.
Austin's speech-act theory of the 1950s, the performative has grown
to permeate wildly diverse scholarly fields, ranging from
deconstruction and feminism to legal theory and even theories about
the structure of matter. Here Jeffrey T. Nealon discovers how the
performative will remain vital in the twenty-first century, arguing
that it was never merely concerned with linguistic meaning but
rather constitutes an insight into the workings of immaterial
force. Fates of the Performative takes a deep dive into this
"performative force" to think about the continued power and
relevance of this wide-ranging concept. Offering both a history of
the performative's mutations and a diagnosis of its present state,
Nealon traces how it has been deployed by key writers in the past
sixty years, including foundational thinkers like Jacques Derrida,
Eve Kosofsky Sedgewick, and Judith Butler; contemporary theorists
such as Thomas Piketty and Antonio Negri; and the "conceptual
poetry" of Kenneth Goldsmith. Ultimately, Nealon's inquiry is
animated by one powerful question: what's living and what's dead in
performative theory? In deconstructing the reaction against the
performative in current humanist thought, Fates of the Performative
opens up important conversations about systems theory, animal
studies, object-oriented ontology, and the digital humanities.
Nealon's stirring appeal makes a necessary declaration of the
performative's continued power and relevance at a time of
neoliberal ascendancy.
Despite the presence of the Flaming Lips in a commercial for a
copier and Iggy Pop's music in luxury cruise advertisements,
Jeffrey T. Nealon argues that popular music has not exactly been
co-opted in the American capitalist present. Contemporary
neoliberal capitalism has, in fact, found a central organizing use
for the values of twentieth-century popular music: being authentic,
being your own person, and being free. In short, not being like
everybody else. Through a consideration of the shift in dominant
modes of power in the American twentieth and twenty-first
centuries, from what Michel Foucault calls a dominant
"disciplinary" mode of power to a "biopolitical" mode, Nealon
argues that the modes of musical "resistance" need to be completely
rethought and that a commitment to musical authenticity or
meaning-saying "no" to the mainstream-is no longer primarily where
we might look for music to function against the grain. Rather, it
is in the technological revolutions that allow biopolitical
subjects to deploy music within an everyday set of practices (MP3
listening on smartphones and iPods, streaming and downloading on
the internet, the background music that plays nearly everywhere)
that one might find a kind of ambient or ubiquitous answer to the
"attention capitalism" that has come to organize neoliberalism in
the American present. In short, Nealon stages the final
confrontation between "keepin' it real" and "sellin' out."
In conventional identity politics subjective differences are
understood negatively, as gaps to be overcome, as lacks of
sameness, as evidence of failed or incomplete unity. In Alterity
Politics Jeffrey T. Nealon argues instead for a concrete and
ethical understanding of community, one that requires response,
action, and performance instead of passive resentment and
unproductive mourning for a whole that cannot be attained.While
discussing the work of others who have refused to thematize
difference in terms of the possibility or impossibility of
sameness-Levinas, Butler, Derrida, Foucault, Deleuze, Guattari,
Zizek, Jameson, Heidegger, Bakhtin-Nealon argues that ethics is
constituted as inexorable affirmative response to different
identities, not through an inability to understand or totalize the
other. Alterity Politics combines this theoretical itinerary with
crucial discussions of specific and diverse sites of literary and
cultural production-the work of William S. Burroughs, Amiri Baraka,
Andy Warhol, Ishmael Reed, Rush Limbaugh, and Vincent Van
Gogh-along with analyses of the social formation of subjects as
found in identity politics, and in multicultural and whiteness
studies. In the process, Nealon takes on a wide variety of issues
including white male anger, the ethical questions raised by drug
addiction, the nature of literary meaning, and the concept of
"becoming-black." In seeking to build an ethical structure around
poststructuralist discourse and to revitalize the applied use of
theoretical concepts to notions of performative identity, Alterity
Politics marks a decisive intervention in literary theory, cultural
studies, twentieth-century philosophy, and performance studies.
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