1st Edition

A Phenomenology of the Alien Encounters with the Weird and Inscrutable Other

Edited By Aaron B. Daniels Copyright 2025
170 Pages
by Routledge

170 Pages
by Routledge

170 Pages
by Routledge

A Phenomenology of the Alien: Encounters with the Weird and Inscrutable Other considers both literal and figurative experiences of the alien from a psychological, psychoanalytic and philosophical perspective. Throughout the book, the authors wrestle with the unexplained, ineffable, unspeakable, sublime, uncanny, abject and Miéville’s abcanny. This collection provides phenomenologies of... Read more

List of contributors

Acknowledgements

 

Foreword: “Nietzsche and Nihilism: Opening to the Dimension of the Other.”

William Franke

 

Chapter 1: Introduction: “The Abcanny: Encounters with the Inscrutably Alien.”

Aaron B. Daniels

 

Chapter 2: “The Divinalien: On Divine Alterity.”

Emily McAvan

 

Chapter 3: “The Alien Other: Cosmology and Social Transmission of UFO Narratives.”

Scott R. Scribner and Gregory J. Wheeler

 

Chapter 4: “The Human and the Smart House: Speculative Psychology and Systems of

Attachment.”

Anna Bugajska

 

Chapter 5: “Repetition and Return in Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast Trilogy.”

Dorothy Chang

 

Chapter 6: “Alienation, Obsession, and Enthrallment in Thomas Ligotti's “The Small

People,” “Nethescurial,” and other Weird Fiction.”

Jason M. Harris

 

Chapter 7: “The Alien Inside: Jean Laplanche’s Internal Other in the Fiction of Brian

Evenson and the Case of Ana.”

Michael Waldon

 

Index

Biography

Aaron B. Daniels, PhD, is an associate teaching professor, mindfulness fellow, and leader of the Psychological Humanities Research Group at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.

"Picking up this volume is the equivalent of being seated in a darkening movie theatre only to realize that you are sitting alongside both many of the luminaries of Western thought—Plato, Nietzsche, Levinas, Derrida, Kristeva, Heidegger, Freud—and many of the masters of science fiction and horror cinema—Kubrick, Spielberg, Lucas, Burton, Nolan, et al. This book thrums with life—of both terrestrial and extra-terrestrial varieties (!)—weaving together theological, philosophical, socio-cultural and psychoanalytic lines of discussion with our quest for, and engagement with, the many forms of that which is ‘intractably alien.’ It redefines what can be achieved philosophically, conceptually, when the psychological humanities thoroughly immerses itself in the cultural archives of science fiction and horror."

Derek Hook, PhD, Professor of Psychology, Duquesne University, Author of Six Moments in Lacan (2017)

"This volume explores the question of aliens—real and imaginary—with compelling and original scholarship. Through an interdisciplinary dialogue with philosophy, literature, cinema, and religion, it interrogates the uncanny phenomenon of the stranger as human, animal, landscape, and divine. Ranging from mythology and magic to technology and politics, its questioning of the limits of the human is both topical and timely."

Richard Kearney, PhD, Charles Seelig Professor in Philosophy, Boston College