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  • Nature and Its Unnatural Relations: Points of Access

    Nature and Its Unnatural Relations by Beauclair, Alain; Toth, Josh;

    Points of Access

    Series: TEXTURES: Philosophy / Literature / Culture;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 100.00
      • The price is estimated because at the time of ordering we do not know what conversion rates will apply to HUF / product currency when the book arrives. In case HUF is weaker, the price increases slightly, in case HUF is stronger, the price goes lower slightly.

        47 775 Ft (45 500 Ft + 5% VAT)
      • Discount 20% (cc. 9 555 Ft off)
      • Discounted price 38 220 Ft (36 400 Ft + 5% VAT)
      • Discount is valid until: 31 December 2025

    47 775 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
    • Date of Publication 15 July 2024
    • Number of Volumes Hardback

    • ISBN 9781666943764
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages354 pages
    • Size 235.71x158.75x25.654 mm
    • Weight 626 g
    • Language English
    • 570

    Categories

    Long description:

    "Consisting of contributions from a host of international scholars (in fields as diverse as literature, architecture, philosophy, and education), Alain Beauclair and Josh Toth's Nature and Its Unnatural Relations: Points of Access intercedes in ongoing debates about accessing, defining, and respecting a world humans continue to misuse and misunderstand-and that, as a result, is becoming increasingly inhospitable. The chapters shuttle between a variety of aesthetic and philosophical concerns-from theology and Biblical interpretation to colonialism, hermeneutics, phenomenology, worlding, posthumanism, and speculative realism. These varied approaches are united by a single aporetic thread: efforts to surmount the problem of ""human access"" invariably risk repeating (ever more blindly) the violence and immorality of anthropocentrism. We seem trapped in the cul-de-sac of the Anthropocene. To discover potential new exits, the contributors consider whether it is possible or advisable to abandon so-called ""correlationism""-of art, of literature, of technology. If it is, then how? If not, how might we more ethically reembrace our innately corruptive relations with a world of non-human others? How might we free ""nature"" (finally) from the demands of human action and human thought without mendaciously reinscribing humanity's distance from it or denying a proximity that is only traversable by artificial means?"

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    Table of Contents:

    "

    Introduction: What we Know (to be Unrelatable)
    by Alain Beauclair and Josh Toth
    Prologue: How to Advocate-Radically, Kindly [A Transcript, A Conversation]
    by Tracey Lindberg

    Part I: Outside Structures
    Chapter 1: Encountering the Mountain: A Sketch for a Hermeneutics of Nature
    by Ruairidh J. Brown
    Chapter 2: Kawabata's Sealed Play: Restoration and Reenchantment
    by Eric Bronson
    Chapter 3: A Principled Account of Artistic Sublimity in Kant's Critique of Judgment
    by Joshua D.F. Hooke
    Chapter 4: Architecture and the Ends of Man: Derrida, Latour, Eisenman
    by Henrik Oxvig and Dag Petersson

    Part II: Before Nature
    Chapter 5: Nature and Dominion in Genesis
    by Robert Burch
    Chapter 6: Making the Hands Impure: On the Role of Orality in Becoming Responsible for the More-Than-Human World
    by Kaleb Cohen
    Chapter 7: The Narrator's ""Dialectic of Enlightenment"" in Howard O'Hagan's Tay John
    by Sergiy Yakovenko
    Chapter 8: Romanticism and the Anthropocene: Mirrors and Inversions in Coleridge, Shelley, Emerson, and Melville
    by Samantha C. Harvey

    Part III: Reading Otherwise
    Chapter 9: Beyond Negative Ecology: Earth Art in a Time of Climate Crisis
    by John Culbert
    Chapter 10: Re-calibrating Responses: De-conditioning Our Relationship to the Natural World Through Literature
    by Jennifer Carmichael
    Chapter 11: I Don't Believe in the Sun: Symbolic Action and Mythic Explanation in Klara and the Sun
    by Ammon Allred
    Chapter 12: Badiou's Scientific Event and Ishiguro's Klara and the Sun
    by Adriel M. Trott

    Epilogue: Moral Grandstanding
    by Claire Colebrook

    "

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