Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
The Incorporeal might seem to be a departure for Elizabeth Grosz, whose work has provided one of the most profound and sustained theorizations of matter, embodiment and sexual difference. Rather than a refusal of corporeal feminism, this book is a powerful exploration of corporeality and its possibilities. A remarkable and groundbreaking work, The Incorporeal intensifies Grosz's already complex and nuanced account of bodies and difference: incorporeality is not to be equated with mind, ideality or the disembodied. It is, rather, part of the volatility that Grosz has always discerned in bodies, human and nonhuman. -- Claire Colebrook, Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English, Pennsylvania State University
In this new book, Elizabeth Grosz continues her investigations of role of the body in thinking in art and science, as in politics and philosophy. Through a fresh engagement with the work of Deleuze and the thinkers he admired, she extracts a vital new ethics, itself part of a philosophy of nature beyond the limits of 'the new materialism'. A stimulating and rigorous journey towards a new philosophy for our times. -- John Rajchman, author of The Deleuze Connections
In this rich and deeply rewarding book, Elizabeth Grosz traces the hidden genealogy—centered on but not reducible to Gilles Deleuze—of a philosophy that makes room for both body and mind, without reductionism, but also without mysticism. -- Steven Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English, Wayne State University
Philosophy, and in its wake cultural theory, has long made periodic pendulum swings between two poles, the materialist and the idealist. What is needed is a move through the middle: an incorporeal materialism, or a materialist idealism. This is the important and timely project Elizabeth Grosz undertakes in this book, with the help of judiciously chosen philosophical guides, from the Stoics to Simondon. -- Brian Massumi, University of Montreal
This is a bold, brilliant, and fascinating study of an alternative philosophical tradition. The treatments of Simondon and Ruyer are especially welcome, and a new and highly challenging conception of materialism is offered. -- Keith Ansell-Pearson, University of Warwick
Theoretically deft, rigorous, lucid, and generous, The Incorporeal is revelatory in animating the variegated metaphysical intimacies of terms whose interplay casts (ongoing) dualist tradition as, if not minoritarian, then as stubbornly in denial or too-stubbornly wedded to the term whose insular privilege it elects to uphold. -- Helen Thompson * Modern Philology *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1. The Stoics, Materialism, and the Incorporeal
2. Spinoza, Substance, and Attributes
3. Nietzsche and Amor Fati
4. Deleuze and the Plane of Immanence
5. Simondon and the Preindividual
6. Ruyer and an Embryogenesis of the World
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

The Incorporeal

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    A Paperback / softback by Elizabeth Grosz

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      View other formats and editions of The Incorporeal by Elizabeth Grosz

      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 06/11/2018
      ISBN13: 9780231181631, 978-0231181631
      ISBN10: 0231181639

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      The Incorporeal might seem to be a departure for Elizabeth Grosz, whose work has provided one of the most profound and sustained theorizations of matter, embodiment and sexual difference. Rather than a refusal of corporeal feminism, this book is a powerful exploration of corporeality and its possibilities. A remarkable and groundbreaking work, The Incorporeal intensifies Grosz's already complex and nuanced account of bodies and difference: incorporeality is not to be equated with mind, ideality or the disembodied. It is, rather, part of the volatility that Grosz has always discerned in bodies, human and nonhuman. -- Claire Colebrook, Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English, Pennsylvania State University
      In this new book, Elizabeth Grosz continues her investigations of role of the body in thinking in art and science, as in politics and philosophy. Through a fresh engagement with the work of Deleuze and the thinkers he admired, she extracts a vital new ethics, itself part of a philosophy of nature beyond the limits of 'the new materialism'. A stimulating and rigorous journey towards a new philosophy for our times. -- John Rajchman, author of The Deleuze Connections
      In this rich and deeply rewarding book, Elizabeth Grosz traces the hidden genealogy—centered on but not reducible to Gilles Deleuze—of a philosophy that makes room for both body and mind, without reductionism, but also without mysticism. -- Steven Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English, Wayne State University
      Philosophy, and in its wake cultural theory, has long made periodic pendulum swings between two poles, the materialist and the idealist. What is needed is a move through the middle: an incorporeal materialism, or a materialist idealism. This is the important and timely project Elizabeth Grosz undertakes in this book, with the help of judiciously chosen philosophical guides, from the Stoics to Simondon. -- Brian Massumi, University of Montreal
      This is a bold, brilliant, and fascinating study of an alternative philosophical tradition. The treatments of Simondon and Ruyer are especially welcome, and a new and highly challenging conception of materialism is offered. -- Keith Ansell-Pearson, University of Warwick
      Theoretically deft, rigorous, lucid, and generous, The Incorporeal is revelatory in animating the variegated metaphysical intimacies of terms whose interplay casts (ongoing) dualist tradition as, if not minoritarian, then as stubbornly in denial or too-stubbornly wedded to the term whose insular privilege it elects to uphold. -- Helen Thompson * Modern Philology *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments
      List of Abbreviations
      Introduction
      1. The Stoics, Materialism, and the Incorporeal
      2. Spinoza, Substance, and Attributes
      3. Nietzsche and Amor Fati
      4. Deleuze and the Plane of Immanence
      5. Simondon and the Preindividual
      6. Ruyer and an Embryogenesis of the World
      Conclusion
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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