Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Posthumanist Manifesto

View through CrossRef
Posthumanist Manifesto: A Pluralistic Approach compares the posthumanist proposal with humanism and transhumanism in ethics, aesthetics, ontology, and epistemology. Roberto Marchesini clarifies the specificity of the posthumanist approach and the novelty of its theoretical and applicative program. Beyond theoretical aspects of poshumanism, this book proposes new approaches to social models, personal rights and citizenship, the relationship between the biosphere and the ecological crisis, and the impact of technology. This book answers questions such as “What is posthumanism and why does it have this definition?”; “How does posthumanism differ from other theoretical approaches?”; and “What are the urgencies to be addressed for posthumanist critique?” The author explores how posthumanism interprets technology in relationship with the body, how to think of a posthumanist anthropology, what ontological transformations posthumanism introduces, and why we can talk about a paradigmatic metamorphosis with respect to humanism, as posthumanism thinks and plans the society of the future.
The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
Title: Posthumanist Manifesto
Description:
Posthumanist Manifesto: A Pluralistic Approach compares the posthumanist proposal with humanism and transhumanism in ethics, aesthetics, ontology, and epistemology.
Roberto Marchesini clarifies the specificity of the posthumanist approach and the novelty of its theoretical and applicative program.
Beyond theoretical aspects of poshumanism, this book proposes new approaches to social models, personal rights and citizenship, the relationship between the biosphere and the ecological crisis, and the impact of technology.
This book answers questions such as “What is posthumanism and why does it have this definition?”; “How does posthumanism differ from other theoretical approaches?”; and “What are the urgencies to be addressed for posthumanist critique?” The author explores how posthumanism interprets technology in relationship with the body, how to think of a posthumanist anthropology, what ontological transformations posthumanism introduces, and why we can talk about a paradigmatic metamorphosis with respect to humanism, as posthumanism thinks and plans the society of the future.

Related Results

The Ego Made Manifest
The Ego Made Manifest
From Karl Marx to Wyndham Lewis, this book examines Max Stirner’s influence on the modern manifesto. Max Stirner has long proven to be an elusive figure at the fringes of...
Nude Vibrations: Isadora Duncan’s Creatural Aesthetic
Nude Vibrations: Isadora Duncan’s Creatural Aesthetic
This chapter reads Duncan as a paradigmatic test-case for re-seeing the complexities of “naturalness” in the early twentieth century in relation to animality, performance, and an a...
Posthumanist Vulnerability
Posthumanist Vulnerability
A timely dethroning of the human subject and embracing of a new kind of existence, in this book Christine Daigle highlights the affirmative potential of vulnerability amidst unprec...
A Manifesto for the Just City
A Manifesto for the Just City
This book addresses the need to re-imagine and re-conceptualise the Just City in light of recent systemic shocks: climate change, the pandemic, a generalised erosion of democratic ...
Modernism and the posthumanist subject
Modernism and the posthumanist subject
the architecture of Hannes Meyer and Ludwig Hilberseimer, K. Michael Hays...
Woolf’s Floating Monkeys and Whirling Women
Woolf’s Floating Monkeys and Whirling Women
This chapter considers two of Virginia Woolf’s most experimental texts, her Nurse Lugton story for children and her novel The Waves. The first catalogues an awareness of the way th...
Postdevelopmental Approaches to Play
Postdevelopmental Approaches to Play
This book deconstructs traditional developmentalist logic around play and explores play in the broadest sense. It deconstructs traditional developmentalist logic around play w...
Art, Feminism, and Community
Art, Feminism, and Community
Abstract Are artists, their communities, and their works of art interconnected? How may multiple feminist perspectives be applied to the perception and articulation ...

Back to Top