French Technological Thought and the Nonhuman Turn

Author(s)
Chalmers, Madeleine
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU); UK Research and Innovation; KU Open ServicesLanguage
EnglishAbstract
French Technological Thought and the Nonhuman Turn traces a genealogy of thinking and writing about technology, which takes us from the French avant-gardes to the contemporary ‘nonhuman turn’ in Anglo-American theory via the Surrealists, Gilbert Simondon, and Gilles Deleuze. Tracking the unruly transition from Catholic vocabularies of grace, potentiality, and actuality to the modern and contemporary secular lexicon of agency, virtuality, and affect, this book explores technology as a source of subject matter and conceptual metaphors, but also probes how ideas and words are modes of technicity through which we shape and reshape the world. Fusing literature, philosophy, and theology, it offers readers new contexts – and questions – for the egalitarian ontological commitments of contemporary post- and nonhuman thinking.
Keywords
Literary Criticism; European; French; Philosophy; Political; Philosophy; SocialPublisher
Edinburgh University PressPublisher website
http://www.euppublishing.com/Publication date and place
2025Imprint
Edinburgh University PressClassification
Literature: history & criticism
Social & political philosophy
Social & political philosophy

