336 Pages
    by Routledge

    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    This volume argues that theory, far from being dead, has undergone major shifts in order to come to terms with the most urgent cultural and political questions of today. Offering an overview of theory’s new directions, this groundbreaking collection includes essays on affect, biopolitics, biophilosophy, the aesthetic, and neoliberalism, as well as examinations of established areas such as subaltern studies, the postcolonial, and ethics.

    Influential figures such as Agamben, Badiou, Arendt, Deleuze, Derrida and Meillassoux are examined in a range of contexts. Gathering together some of the top thinkers in the field, this volume not only speculates on the fate of theory but shows its current diversity, encouraging conversation between divergent strands. Each section places the essays in their contexts and stages a comparison between different but ultimately related ways in which key thinkers are moving beyond poststructuralism.

    Contributors: Amanda Anderson, Ray Brassier, Adriana Cavarero, Eva Cherniavsky, Rey Chow, Claire Colebrook, Laurent Dubreuil, Roberto Esposito, Simon Gikandi, Martin Hagglünd, Peter Hallward, Brian Massumi, Peter Osborne, Elizabeth Povinelli, William Rasch, Henry Staten, Bernard Stiegler, Eugene Thacker, Cary Wolfe, Linda Zerilli.

    Introduction  - Jane Elliott and Derek Attridge  Assessing the Field  1. Philosophy After Theory: Transdisciplinarity and the New - Peter Osborne  2. Theory as a Research Program—the Very Idea - Cary Wolfe  3. Theory after Critical Theory - William Rasch 4. Extinct Theory - Claire Colebrook  Between theory and practice: affect, will, judgment  5. Perception Attack: The Force to Own Time - Brian Massumi 6. The Will of the People: Dialectical Voluntarism and the Subject of Politics
    Peter Hallward 7. The Persistence of Hope: Critical Theory and Enduring in Late Liberalism - Elizabeth Povinelli 8. The Practice of Judgement: Hannah Arendt’s ‘Copernican Revolution’ - Linda Zerilli  Rethinking the politics of representation  9. When Reflexivity Becomes Porn: Mutations of a Modernist Theoretical Practice
    Rey Chow  10. The Canny Subaltern - Eva Cherniavsky  11. ‘Theory After Postcolonial Theory: Rethinking the Work of Mimesis’- Simon Gikandi  Biopolitics and ethics  12. After Life: Swarms, Demons, and the Antinomies of Immanence - Eugene Thacker  13. Inclining the Subject: Natality, Alterity, Ethics - Adriana Cavarero  14. The Person and Human Life- Roberto Esposito  Renewing the aesthetic  15. The Wrong Turn of Aesthetics - Henry Staten  16. Literature after theory, or: the intellective turn
    Laurent Dubreuil  17. The Liberal Aesthetic - Amanda Anderson  Philosophy after theory  18. The Arche-Materiality of Time: Deconstruction, Speculative Materialism, and Radical Atheism - Martin Hagglünd  19. Concepts, Objects, Gems - Ray Brassier  20. The Pharmacology of the Spirit - Bernard Stiegler

    Biography

    Jane Elliott is Lecturer in the Department of English and Related Literature at the University of York. She is the author of Popular Feminist Fiction as American Allegory: Representing National Time (Palgrave 2008), and her essays have appeared in Cultural Critique, Modern Fiction Studies, Novel and the PMLA. She is currently at work on a project on neoliberalism, choice and the novel.

    Derek Attridge is Professor in the Department of English and Related Literature at the University of York. Among his books are Peculiar Language: Literature as Difference from the Renaissance to James Joyce (Routledge, 1988), The Singularity of Literature (Routledge, 2004), J. M. Coetzee and the Ethics of Reading: Literature in the Event (Chicago, 2004), and Reading and Responsibility: Deconstruction’s Traces (Edinburgh, 2010). Edited and co-edited volumes include Post-structuralist Joyce: Essays from the French (Cambridge, 1984), Post-structuralism and the Question of History (Cambridge, 1987), and Acts of Literature by Jacques Derrida (Routledge, 1992).

    'Arguably the most significant contribution of the volume Theory After 'Theory' to the increasingly deterritorialized debates surrounding the future of critical theory across the disciplines is to have brought before the public radical probings into fundamental concepts and modes of thinking that expose the gaps and neuralgic points both of "high theory" and of the mainstays in contemporary thought, soliciting a re-thinking of vital areas addressed by ethcial, political, and aesthetic criticism.' - Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies