Description
Book SynopsisThe contemporary has marked itself off from modernity by questioning its humanism that centers the world around the human as the moral subject of free will and self-determination, the bearer of universal essence that is the basis of human rights. Modernism normalizes humanism through language as referential, a set of interrelated signs that correspond to the empirical reality outside it. Humanist modernity, in other words, is seen in the contemporary as a regime that, by separating the human from the non-human and insisting on language as correspondence, not only fails to engage the emerging forms of social relations in which the boundaries of human and machine are fading but is also indifferent to the difference between the other's life and other lives. Human, All Too (Post)Human: The Humanities after Humanism argues that the Nietzschean tendencies that provide the philosophical boundaries of post-humanism do not undo humanism but reform it, constructing a parallel discourse that save
Trade ReviewHuman, All Too (Post)Human is the culmination of some extraordinary and necessary work produced over the last 20 years. . . . The authors argue convincingly that the recent theory emerging from neoliberalism obscures history, materiality, and class relations. * Science & Society *
Human, All Too (Post)Human is an uncommon book; it is a philosophically insightful and erudite analysis of the contemporary situation with deep political commitment to social change. It is a piercing root critique of governing ideas and the social conditions that produce them at a time when critique itself has become the target of accommodationist thinkers such as Bruno Latour in order to sideline such un-assembling of the social. Written against the horizon of Marx’s Critique of the Gotha Program, Human, All Too (Post)Human, breaks the silence on what has become unspeakable in contemporary cultural critique and argues not for freedom from humanism or post-humanism, which have haunted bourgeois thought, but for a future free from wage labor. -- Peter McLaren, Honorary Chair Professor and Director of the Center for Critical Studies, Northeast Normal University, China
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Posthumanism and the Evacuation of Critique - Jennifer Cotter, Kimberly DeFazio, Robert Faivre, Amrohini Sahay, Julie P. Torrant, Stephen Tumino, and Rob Wilkie I: "Natural" Life and "Species" Life 1 The New Class Common-Sense: Biopolitics, Posthumanism, and Love - Jennifer Cotter 2 Loving Transnationalism: Spiritualizing Class in House of Sand and Fog - Amrohini Sahay II: New Materialisms, Object Ontologies, and Class Totalities 3 "Theory Too Becomes a Material Force": Militant Materialism or Messianic Matterism? - Stephen Tumino 4 Mind over Matter and Other Posthumanist Feminist Tales - Julie P. Torrant 5 Ghostly Objectivity: Commodity Fetishism, Animated Monsters, and the Posthuman Object - Rob Wilkie III: Theory in the Common, Theory in the Commune 6 The Commune, NOT the Common - Kimberly DeFazio 7 Posthumanist Metaphysics and the Necessity of Dialectics - Robert Faivre IV: Disaster Theory 8 The "Event-al" Logic of Disaster: On "Left" Exinctionism - Jennifer Cotter, Kimberly DeFazio, Robert Faivre, Amrohini Sahay, Julie P. Torrant, Stephen Tumino, and Rob Wilkie