Affective ontologies: Post-humanist perspectives on the self,feeling and intersubjectivity |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Western Sydney, Australia;2. Australian Catholic University, Australia |
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Abstract: | At this particular historical juncture of the Anthropocene it is becoming increasingly clear that, as Val Plumwood puts it, the survival of our species depends upon how our relationships with earth others are reconfigured . Yet as the human is once again placed at the centre of our planetary life, this time as a geological agent, a growing body of scholarship has taken up the challenge of rethinking the human and its limits (see for example the special issue of the journal Angelaki 16(4), 2011). This special issue seeks to contribute to this body of work from the perspective of posthumanist explorations of affect, and thereby to open possibilities for articulating non-solipsistic and non-anthropocentric notions of the subject. |
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Keywords: | Affect Self Feeling Intersubjectivity Posthumanism |
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