Description

Book Synopsis

In Singularities at the Threshold: The Ontology of Unrest, Bruno Gullì calls into question the concept of the independent and sovereign individual of the liberal (and neoliberal) tradition from the standpoint of the ontology of singularity, that is, the plural constitution of what appears to be an individual. Singularity is not the result of a process of individuation, but the process itself. He argues that the process of individuation—whereby at each stage everything appears to be individuated as such, to be an individual thing—is in reality always already plural, a process of transindividuation, or better, trans-dividuation. Gullì further examines why singularity is usually confused with individuality; what comes after the sovereign and independent individual, after the subject; and what the role of subversive and liberated singularities is in bringing about a new ethos and a better world.



Trade Review

"At stake in this book are the fundamental questions of philosophy. The notion of singularity is at the same time the crucial topic addressed here and a lens that allows reframing the conceptual foundations of philosophy as a practice of thought. Challenging the very paradigm of subjectivity, Bruno Gullì opens up new vistas on the way in which we inhabit the world. He sheds light on the materiality of servitude without ever losing sight of the possibility of liberation. Singularities at the Threshold is a major philosophical work, with important implications for the politics of contemporary social movements."

-- Sandro Mezzadra, University of Bologna

"In this tour de force, Bruno Gullì throws into question the dominant politics of number and the traditional notions of subjectivity known to the philosophical community. He creatively destroys the concept of the individual through a radical synthetic grounding of the singular not as a result but as an infinite and open-ended process. Giving us a highly original conceptualization of this process as trans-dividuation, Gullì establishes his work as an avant-garde philosophy, one in which new weapons of criticism are imaginatively forged and an extraordinary effort is made to think through our heightened contingencies and necessary subversions."

-- Michael Pelias, LIU Brooklyn

"No one is a more novel reader of the most militant lines of European philosophy than Bruno Gullì . This book is a persistent pleasure to read, as Gullì makes his way through his argument with verve and commitment."

-- Stefano Harney, Ton Duc Thang University

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction

Part One: Contingency

Chapter One: The Open: Ontology of Mystery and Simplicity

Chapter Two: Replacing the Individual. The Impossible Individuation

Chapter Three: Subject of Fiction: Subjection and Subjugation

Part Two: Capture

Chapter Four: Borders and Vortices (Life and Work)

Chapter Five: Politics of Disposability and Cruelty

Chapter Six: Capture and Thresholds: The Politics of Number, the Accidental Glass

Part Three: Subversions

Chapter Seven: A Passage to Art

Chapter Eight: Disaffection and Care

Chapter Nine: Relations without a subject

Bibliography

About the Author

Singularities at the Threshold: The Ontology of

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    A Paperback / softback by Bruno Gullì

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      View other formats and editions of Singularities at the Threshold: The Ontology of by Bruno Gullì

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 15/05/2023
      ISBN13: 9781793606785, 978-1793606785
      ISBN10: 1793606781

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In Singularities at the Threshold: The Ontology of Unrest, Bruno Gullì calls into question the concept of the independent and sovereign individual of the liberal (and neoliberal) tradition from the standpoint of the ontology of singularity, that is, the plural constitution of what appears to be an individual. Singularity is not the result of a process of individuation, but the process itself. He argues that the process of individuation—whereby at each stage everything appears to be individuated as such, to be an individual thing—is in reality always already plural, a process of transindividuation, or better, trans-dividuation. Gullì further examines why singularity is usually confused with individuality; what comes after the sovereign and independent individual, after the subject; and what the role of subversive and liberated singularities is in bringing about a new ethos and a better world.



      Trade Review

      "At stake in this book are the fundamental questions of philosophy. The notion of singularity is at the same time the crucial topic addressed here and a lens that allows reframing the conceptual foundations of philosophy as a practice of thought. Challenging the very paradigm of subjectivity, Bruno Gullì opens up new vistas on the way in which we inhabit the world. He sheds light on the materiality of servitude without ever losing sight of the possibility of liberation. Singularities at the Threshold is a major philosophical work, with important implications for the politics of contemporary social movements."

      -- Sandro Mezzadra, University of Bologna

      "In this tour de force, Bruno Gullì throws into question the dominant politics of number and the traditional notions of subjectivity known to the philosophical community. He creatively destroys the concept of the individual through a radical synthetic grounding of the singular not as a result but as an infinite and open-ended process. Giving us a highly original conceptualization of this process as trans-dividuation, Gullì establishes his work as an avant-garde philosophy, one in which new weapons of criticism are imaginatively forged and an extraordinary effort is made to think through our heightened contingencies and necessary subversions."

      -- Michael Pelias, LIU Brooklyn

      "No one is a more novel reader of the most militant lines of European philosophy than Bruno Gullì . This book is a persistent pleasure to read, as Gullì makes his way through his argument with verve and commitment."

      -- Stefano Harney, Ton Duc Thang University

      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Introduction

      Part One: Contingency

      Chapter One: The Open: Ontology of Mystery and Simplicity

      Chapter Two: Replacing the Individual. The Impossible Individuation

      Chapter Three: Subject of Fiction: Subjection and Subjugation

      Part Two: Capture

      Chapter Four: Borders and Vortices (Life and Work)

      Chapter Five: Politics of Disposability and Cruelty

      Chapter Six: Capture and Thresholds: The Politics of Number, the Accidental Glass

      Part Three: Subversions

      Chapter Seven: A Passage to Art

      Chapter Eight: Disaffection and Care

      Chapter Nine: Relations without a subject

      Bibliography

      About the Author

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