Details

Dividuations


Dividuations

Theories of Participation

von: Michaela Ott

96,29 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 16.02.2018
ISBN/EAN: 9783319720142
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<p>This book offers an epistemological critique of the concept of the individual and of individuality. It argues that because of our bio(techno)logical entanglements with non-human others, billions of microorganisms and our multiple (in)voluntary participations in socio(techno)logical processes, we have to conceive of ourselves no longer as individuals, but as dividuations. This dividual character which enforces simultaneous and multidirectional participations in different spheres is also apt for other living beings, for entities such as the nation state, for single cultures, production processes and works of art. The critique of individuality in the book is also elaborated in critical re-readings of classical philosophical texts from Plato up to today; the new concept of dividuation is a modified and semantically enriched version of certain concepts of the French philosophers Gilbert Simondon and Gilles Deleuze.</p><p> </p>
<p>Introduction.- 1. Individual/Individuality/Individuation.- 2. Dividuals/Dividuations.- 3. Bio(techno)logical Dividuations.- 4. Socio(techno)logical Dividuations.- 5. Aesthetic and Artistic Dividuation Processes.- Index.</p>
<p>Michaela Ott is Professor of Aesthetic Theories at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste (Academy of Fine Art) Hamburg, Germany. Her main publications include <i>Deleuze: Zur Einführung </i>(2005), <i>Affizierung </i>(2010), <i>Timing of Affect: Epistemologies of Affection</i> (2014), edited with Marie-Luise Angerer and Bernd Bösel and <i>Dividuationen: Theorien der Teilhabe</i> (2015).<br/></p><p></p> <p> <br/></p>
<p>This book offers an epistemological critique of the concept of the individual and of individuality. It argues that because of our bio(techno)logical entanglements with non-human others, billions of microorganisms and our multiple (in)voluntary participations in socio(techno)logical processes, we have to conceive of ourselves no longer as individuals, but as dividuations. This dividual character which enforces simultaneous and multidirectional participations in different spheres is also apt for other living beings, for entities such as the nation state, for single cultures, production processes and works of art. The critique of individuality in the book is also elaborated in critical re-readings of classical philosophical texts from Plato up to today; the new concept of dividuation is a modified and semantically enriched version of certain concepts of the French philosophers Gilbert Simondon and Gilles Deleuze.</p><p> </p>
<p>Focuses on the emerging and pivotal concept of dividuation, offering a considered philosophical interpretation of the subject matter</p><p>Explores the new concept of dividuation as a modified and semantically enriched version of certain concepts of the French philosophers Gilbert Simondon and Gilles Deleuze</p><p>Provides a fascinating interdisciplinary scope: pulls together concepts from philosophy, biology, social theory and aesthetics</p>
“A bold and wide-ranging investigation of the hinterland between the ‘I’ and the ‘we’; one that explores the conditions for radically redefining forms of subjectivity and collectivity in ways that can positively embrace the dividuations that make us so much more than the individuals we sometimes think we are.” (Iain MacKenzie, Director of the Centre for Critical Thought, University of Kent, UK) <p>“Ott takes on a particularly weighty task, to redefine our ‘becoming-world’ in the face of demands imposed by modern revelations of the most manifold ‘interpenetration relationships’ and novel modes of subjectivation. She offers her readers the new term dividuation for this. Ott’s promotion of the term dividuation is coupled with an impetus to diagnose our era. Today, she argues, subjectivation is no longer to be understood as individuation, but as dividuation.” (Bernd Bösel, Professor in Media Theory and Media Studies, University of Potsdam, Germany)</p>

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