Movement, Affect, Sensation
Have you been disappointed by books that promise to bring the body or corporeality back into culture? Well, your luck is about to change. In this remarkable book Brian Massumi transports us from the dicey intersection between movement and sensation, through insightful explorations of affect and body image, to a creative reconfiguration of the nature-culture continuum. The writing is experimental and adventurous, as one might expect from a writer who finds inventiveness to be the most distinctive attribute of thinking. The perspective Massumi unfolds will have a major effect on cultural theory for years to come.William Connolly, Johns Hopkins University It is not enough to describe Massumis book as a brilliant achievement. Seldom do we see a political thinker develop his or her ideas with such scrupulous attention to everyday human existence, creating a marvelously fluid architecture of thought around the fundamental question of what the fact of human embodiment does to the activity of thinking. Massumis vigorous critique of both social-constructionist and essentialist theorizations of embodied practices renews the Deleuzian tradition of philosophy for our times.Dipesh Chakrabarty, University of Chicago This is an extraordinary work of scholarship and thought, the most thorough-going critique and reformulation of the culture doctrine that I have read in years. Massumi's prose has a dazzling and sometimes cutting clarity, and yet he bites into very big issues. People will be reading and talking about Parables for the Virtual for a long time to come. Meaghan Morris, author of Too Soon Too Late: History in Popular Culture "After Bergson, Whitehead, Deleuze, and Guattari, the great radical empiricist protest against nave objectivism and nave subjectivism resonates again, bringing wonder back into the most common day experiences. After reading Brian Massumi you will never listen to Sinatra or watch a soccer game the same way again."Isabelle Stengers, Free University of Brussels
Brian Massumi is Associate Professor of Communications at the Universit de Montral. He is the author of Users Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia: Deviations from Deleuze and Guattari and First and Last Emperors: The Absolute State and the Body of the Despot.
Acknowledgments Introduction: Concrete Is as Concrete Doesnt 1. The Autonomy of Affect 2. The Bleed: Where Body Meets Image 3. The Political Economy of Belonging and the Logic of Relation 4. The Evolutionary Alchemy of Reason: Stelarc 5. On the Superiority of the Analog 6. Chaos in the Total Field of Vision 7. The Brightness Confound 8. Strange Horizon: Buildings, Biograms, and the Body Topologic 9. Too-Blue: Color-Patch for an Expanded Empiricism Notes Works Cited Index