Drawing from his previous writings on the search for a new image of thought and the vitalist role of ‘conceptual personae’ in the history of philosophy, Gregg Lambert proposes a new geo-political image of thought that is uniquely commensurate with the globalisation of contemporary continental philos
Towards a Geopolitical Image of Thought
✍ Scribed by Gregg Lambert
- Publisher
- Edinburgh University Press
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 192
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Radically reorientates the future direction of Continental philosophy according to a geo-political image of thought
- Presents the notion of ‘geophilosophy’ as an alternative to contemporary theories of political theology
- Offers a defence of Lyotard’s concept of le differend as charting the future of continental philosophy
- Highlights the role of collective identification in the creation of conceptual personae and ‘isms’ in the history of continental thought
- Shows Nietzsche’s influence on the uniquely modern role of the ‘conceptual persona’ in the philosophy of Deleuze
Drawing from his previous writings on the search for a new image of thought and the vitalist role of ‘conceptual personae’ in the history of philosophy, Gregg Lambert proposes a new geo-political image of thought that is uniquely commensurate with the globalisation of contemporary continental philosophy.
Inspired by Deleuze and Guattari’s concept of geo-philosophy and Jean-Francois Lyotard’s archipelago of contemporary political reason, Lambert radically reorients the future direction of continental philosophy, no longer defined traditionally according to national and linguistic traditions and by the opposition with Anglo-American academic philosophy.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>Serbin explores the complex of factors, external and domestic, that have shaped the geopolitical dynamics of the Caribbean region since the emergence, beginning in 1962, of non-Hispanic actors in the form of the newly independent Caribbean states.</p>
Responsibility, Complexity, and Abortion: Toward a New Image of Ethical Thought draws from feminist theory, post-structuralist theory, and complexity theory to develop a new set of ethical concepts for broaching the thinking challenges that attend the experience of unwanted pregnancy.
Biopolitics as a System of Thought takes seriously Foucault's claim that biopolitics is the primary technique of government, the means by which the organisation of our social relations operates. The book's main argument is that there exists a fundamental relationship between thinking and political a
Biopolitics as a System of Thought takes seriously Foucault's claim that biopolitics is the primary technique of government, the means by which the organisation of our social relations operates. The book's main argument is that there exists a fundamental relationship between thinking and political a