Climate Change, Vol
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Critical Climate Change
Telemorphosis Critical Climate Change Series Editors: Tom Cohen and Claire Colebrook The era of climate change involves the mutation of sys- tems beyond 20th century anthropomorphic models and has stood, until recently, outside representation or address. Understood in a broad and critical sense, climate change concerns material agencies that impact on biomass and energy, erased borders and microbial invention, geological and nanographic time, and extinction events. The possibil- ity of extinction has always been a latent figure in textual production and archives; but the current sense of deple- tion, decay, mutation and exhaustion calls for new modes of address, new styles of publishing and authoring, and new formats and speeds of distribution. As the pressures and re- alignments of this re-arrangement occur, so must the critical languages and conceptual templates, political premises and definitions of ‘life.’ There is a particular need to publish in timely fashion experimental monographs that redefine the boundaries of disciplinary fields, rhetorical invasions, the in- terface of conceptual and scientific languages, and geomor- phic and geopolitical interventions. Critical Climate Change is oriented, in this general manner, toward the epistemo- political mutations that correspond to the temporalities of terrestrial mutation. Telemorphosis Theory in the Era of Climate Change Volume 1 Edited by Tom Cohen OPEN HUMANITIES PRESS An imprint of MPublishing – University of Michigan Library, Ann Arbor 2012 First edition published by Open Humanities Press 2012 Freely available online at http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.10539563.0001.001 Copyright © 2012 Ton Cohen and the respective authors This is an open access book, licensed under Creative Commons By Attribution Share Alike license. -
Twilight-Of-The-Anthropocene-Idols This Is an Open Access Book, Licensed Under Creative Commons by Attribution Share Alike License
UCC Library and UCC researchers have made this item openly available. Please let us know how this has helped you. Thanks! Title Twilight of the Anthropocene idols Author(s) Cohen, Tom; Colebrook, Claire; Miller Hillis, J. Publication date 2016 Original citation Cohen, T., Colebrook, C. and Miller Hillis, J. (2016). Twilight of the Anthropocene Idols. London: Open Humanities Press. DOI: 10.26530/oapen_588463 Type of publication Book Link to publisher's https://openhumanitiespress.org/ version http://dx.doi.org/10.26530/oapen_588463 Access to the full text of the published version may require a subscription. Rights © 2016, Tom Cohen, Claire Colebrook, J. Hillis Miller. This is an open access book, licensed under Creative Commons By Attribution Share Alike license. Under this license, no permission is required from the authors or the publisher for anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute, and/or copy their work so long as the authors and source are cited and resulting derivative works are licensed under the same license. Statutory fair use and other rights are in no way affected by the above. Read more about the license at creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ Item downloaded http://hdl.handle.net/10468/5659 from Downloaded on 2021-10-07T13:18:46Z Twilight of theTwilight of Anthropocene Idols Following on from Theory and the Disappearing Future, Cohen, Colebrook and Miller turn their attention to the eco-critical and environmental humanities’ newest and most fashionable of concepts, the Anthropocene. The question that has escaped focus, as ‘tipping points’ are acknowledged as passed, is how language, mnemo-tech- Twilight of the Anthropocene Idols nologies and the epistemology of tropes appear to guide the accelerating ecocide, and how that implies a mutation within reading itself—from the era of extinction events. -
Deterritorializing the Future Heritage In, of and After the Anthropocene
Deterritorializing the Future Heritage in, of and after the Anthropocene Edited by Rodney Harrison and Colin Sterling Deterritorializing the Future Critical Climate Change Series Editors: Tom Cohen and Claire Colebrook The era of climate change involves the mutation of sys- tems beyond 20th century anthropomorphic models and has stood, until recently, outside representation or address. Understood in a broad and critical sense, climate change concerns material agencies that impact on biomass and energy, erased borders and microbial invention, geological and nanographic time, and extinction events. The possibil- ity of extinction has always been a latent figure in textual production and archives; but the current sense of deple- tion, decay, mutation and exhaustion calls for new modes of address, new styles of publishing and authoring, and new formats and speeds of distribution. As the pressures and re- alignments of this re-arrangement occur, so must the critical languages and conceptual templates, political premises and definitions of ‘life.’ There is a particular need to publish in timely fashion experimental monographs that redefine the boundaries of disciplinary fields, rhetorical invasions, the interface of conceptual and scientific languages, and geo- morphic and geopolitical interventions. Critical Climate Change is oriented, in this general manner, toward the epis- temo-political mutations that correspond to the temporali- ties of terrestrial mutation. Deterritorializing the Future Heritage in, of and after the Anthropocene Edited by Rodney Harrison and Colin Sterling OPEN HUMANITIES PRESS London 2020 First edition published by Open Humanities Press 2020 Text © Contributors, 2020 Images © Contributors and copyright holders named in captions, 2020 Freely available online at: http://openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/deterritorializing-the-future This is an open access book, licensed under Creative Commons By Attribution Share Alike license. -
A Companion to Derrida Blackwell Companions to Philosophy
A Companion to Derrida Blackwell Companions to Philosophy This outstanding student reference series offers a comprehensive and authoritative survey of philoso- phy as a whole. Written by today’s leading philosophers, each volume provides lucid and engaging cover- age of the key figures, terms, topics, and problems of the field. Taken together, the volumes provide the ideal basis for course use, representing an unparalleled work of reference for students and specialists alike. Already published in the series: 1. The Blackwell Companion to Philosophy, Second Edition 29. A Companion to Heidegger Edited by Nicholas Bunnin and Eric Tsui-James Edited by Hubert L. Dreyfus and Mark A. Wrathall 2. A Companion to Ethics 30. A Companion to Rationalism Edited by Peter Singer Edited by Alan Nelson 3. A Companion to Aesthetics, Second Edition 31. A Companion to Pragmatism Edited by Stephen Davies, Kathleen Marie Higgins, Edited by John R. Shook and Joseph Margolis Robert Hopkins, Robert Stecker, and David E. Cooper 32. A Companion to Ancient Philosophy 4. A Companion to Epistemology, Second Edition Edited by Mary Louise Gill and Pierre Pellegrin Edited by Jonathan Dancy, Ernest Sosa and Matthias Steup 33. A Companion to Nietzsche 5. A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy Edited by Keith Ansell Pearson (two-volume set), Second Edition 34. A Companion to Socrates Edited by Robert E. Goodin and Philip Pettit Edited by Sara Ahbel-Rappe and Rachana Kamtekar 6. A Companion to Philosophy of Mind 35. A Companion to Phenomenology and Existentialism Edited by Samuel Guttenplan Edited by Hubert L. Dreyfus and Mark A. Wrathall 7. -
Twilight of the Anthropocene Idols
Twilight of theTwilight of Anthropocene Idols Following on from Theory and the Disappearing Future, Cohen, Colebrook and Miller turn their attention to the eco-critical and environmental humanities’ newest and most fashionable of concepts, the Anthropocene. The question that has escaped focus, as ‘tipping points’ are acknowledged as passed, is how language, mnemo-tech- Twilight of the Anthropocene Idols nologies and the epistemology of tropes appear to guide the accelerating ecocide, and how that implies a mutation within reading itself—from the era of extinction events. Tom Cohen, Claire Colebrook amd J. Hillis Miller There’s something uncanny about the very word Anthropocene. Perhaps it is in the way it seems to arrive too early and too late. It describes something that is still happening as if it had happened. Perhaps it is that it seems to implicate something about the ‘human’ but from a vantage point where the human would be over and done with, or never really existed in the first place. And so besides the crush of data there’s a problem of language to attend to in thinking where and when and who we are or could ever be or have been. Cohen, Colebrook and Miller do us the courtesy of taking the Anthropocene to be a name that marks both the state of the world and the state of language. They bring their consider- able collective resources to bear on this state of language, that we might better weave words that attend to the state of the world. McKenzie Wark, author of Molecular Red: Theory for the Anthropocene With breathtaking fearlessness, the authors expose the full extent of the Enlight- enment shell game: not only have ‘we’ never been modern, we’ve never even been human.