Author name: Editor

Who cares?

Review of Boris Groys, Philosophy of CareMaria Walsh Boris Groys’ Philosophy of Care is comprised of twelve short, pithy sections that plot an abbreviated history of mainly Western philosophy from ancient to modern times. Also included are two diversions into Russian intellectual thought, Groys being an expert on Soviet-era art and literature, as well as a philosopher …

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Art’s social forms

Review of Louis Menand, The Free World: Art and Thought in the Cold WarJosefine Wikström During the past decade there has been an intensified debate in mainstream art criticism about the tension between art’s freedom and free speech. In this debate art’s freedom has been accused of being under severe threat by, on the one …

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Subversive agency

Review of Jill Godmilow, Kill The Documentary Stefanie Baumann Jill Godmilow’s Kill the Documentary: A Letter to Filmmakers, Students, and Scholars is a curious object. Although published by Columbia University Press, it is not quite an academic text. Unlike most of the theoretical volumes that have been written on documentary film in recent years, Godmilow’s is neither concerned …

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Thought without thinkers

Review of Timothy Bewes, Free Indirect: The Novel in a Postfictional AgeCarson Welch A bold question motivates Timothy Bewes’ Free Indirect: Is a non-subjective thought possible? Bewes looks for an answer in recent developments in the novel. His contention is that the novel is a mode of thought which operates not only beyond the ideas represented …

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Transformed formalisms

Review of Nathan Brown, Rationalist Empiricism: A Theory of Speculative CritiqueDaniel Sacilotto Describing the general course of twentieth-century French philosophy, Alain Badiou distinguishes between two major, divergent orientations of thought: a rationalist orientation that promotes a ‘philosophy of the concept’, following from the works of Léon Brunschvicg, and a vitalist-existentialist orientation that promotes a ‘philosophy …

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Accumulating extinctions

Review of Mark Bould, The Anthropocene Unconscious: Climate Catastrophe Culture The Salvage Collective, The Tragedy of the Worker: Towards the Proletarocene Chris Wilbert Catastrophe is inevitably attracting much discussion in relation to film, books, and other entertainment these days, though it is far from a new theme in philosophy. Even in tourism the theme of catastrophe has been …

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Vital institutions

Review of Roberto Esposito, Institution Matt Phull The Covid-19 pandemic had the curious result of simultaneously legitimising and de-legitimising discourses of the biopolitical. The longstanding claim of biopolitical theorists that politics and biological life have become inextricable within medicalised forms of governance has become increasingly undeniable. However, the negative construal of that entanglement within dominant accounts …

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