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Political Affect: Connecting the Social and the Somatic (Posthumanities)

par John Protevi

Séries: Posthumanities (7)

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For many philosophers, the rational cognitive (Cartesian) subject defines the human, or at least defines what humans should be. Yet some recent cognitive science, as well as the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari, has called into question such individuality and rationality and emphasized social and emotional subjectivity. Understanding such embodied and embedded subjectivity, John Protevi argues, demands the notion of bodies politic.In Political Affect, Protevi investigates the relationship between the social and the somatic: how our bodies, minds, and social settings are… (plus d'informations)
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Protevi (Louisiana State Univ.) continues his boundary-crossing work on how to understand the composite that is affective experience. Inspired principally by Gilles Deleuze, Protevi engages with the most interesting advances in neuroscience, complexity theory, and population studies in order to render more meaningful those affective, singular moments that act on us and through us to demand normative accounting and political action. Love, rage, and fear work alongside, below, and above the level of the subject and subjectivity. Standing against a naive essentialism and a naive social constructivism, Protevi develops a new architecture of labile, hybrid concepts (e.g., "body politic, "cognitive affect," and "emergent systems") that answer to the event-assemblages that are the body, subjectivity, and human relations. The first two chapters deliver the conceptual tools; the next two provide their genealogy in Aristotle, Kant, and Deleuze; and the last three provide timely and illuminating case studies (i.e., Terri Schiavo, Columbine High School, and Hurricane Katrina). This fascinating book is lucidly written, given its rich ambition, and will be of great interest to graduate students and faculty who wish to reengage that question most central to political philosophy: human nature itself.
ajouté par ggmiller | modifierChoice. Books for College Libraries, Gregg Daniel Miller (Jun 1, 2010)
 

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For many philosophers, the rational cognitive (Cartesian) subject defines the human, or at least defines what humans should be. Yet some recent cognitive science, as well as the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari, has called into question such individuality and rationality and emphasized social and emotional subjectivity. Understanding such embodied and embedded subjectivity, John Protevi argues, demands the notion of bodies politic.In Political Affect, Protevi investigates the relationship between the social and the somatic: how our bodies, minds, and social settings are

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