توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Subject of Rosi Braidotti: Politics and Concepts
نام کتاب : The Subject of Rosi Braidotti: Politics and Concepts
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : موضوع رزی برایدوتی: سیاست و مفاهیم
سری :
نویسندگان : Bolette Blaagaard (editor)
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2014
تعداد صفحات : 297
ISBN (شابک) : 9781472573353 , 9781472573377
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Title Page\nCopyright Page\nContents\nNotes on Contributors\nAcknowledgments\nPrelude\n Introduction\n Thinking subjectivity with Braidotti\n Biographical roots and bibliographical routes\n Roadmapping the volume\n One possible route\n Notes\n References\nPart 1 - The Concept of the Posthuman\n Chapter 1 Reflections on Ethics, Destructiveness, and Life: Rosi Braidotti and the Posthuman\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Notes\n Chapter 2 Killing in a Posthuman World: The Philosophy and Practice of Critical Military History\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Notes\n References\n Chapter 3 The Future of Scenarios: State Science Fiction\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Notes\n Chapter 4 Living in Molecular Times\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Life forms and forms of life\n References\n Chapter 5 Imagining Posthumanities, Enlivening Feminisms\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Posthuman subjectivity: Raiding the scientific icebox\n Enlivened ethics and its posthuman subjects\n Posthuman humanities, enlivening feminisms\n Conclusions\n References\n Chapter 6 Transplanting Life: Bios and Zoe in Images with Imagination\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Becoming-woman: Seeing with her ears and hands\n Becoming-animal, becoming-earth: A fight between bios and zoe\n Becoming-minoritarian: Globalized biopolitics\n Becoming-imperceptible: Theseus’s ship\n References\n Chapter 7 Disaster Feminism\n Abstract\n Keywords\n References\n Chapter 8 Pro-Proteus: The Transpositional Teratology of Rosi Braidotti\n Abstract\n Keywords\n From Anti-Oedipus to Pro-Proteus\n From philosophy to ecosophy\n References\n Chapter 9 Reading Rosi Braidotti: Returning to Transpositions\n Abstract\n Keywords\n On reading Transpositions1\n Note\n Reference\nInterlude\n Chapter 10 Patterns of (Dis)appearance\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Redrafting ourselves\n Drawing a map\n The old bridge\n Subject-in-progress\n Notes\n References\n Chapter 11 Encountering the Nomadic Subject with a Smile\n Abstract\n Keywords\n References\nPart 2 The Politics of the Academic\n Chapter 12 On Generation(s)\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Existential premise\n For a critique of the concept of generation\n “Baby Boomers” and other feminists\n References\n Chapter 13 Rosi Braidotti and the Affirmation of European Women’s Studies: Points of No Return\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Friendship as metamorphosis (Annamaria)\n Institutions as new material (Berteke)\n European networking as becoming (Aino-Maija)\n Notes\n References\n Chapter 14 For a Baby Boomer Philosopher\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Two nomad women on a Roman street\n Life and adventures of a baby boomer philosopher\n Polyglot puzzles\n X-type encounters\n Nomadic thinking and transatlantic dis/connections\n Notes\n References\n Chapter 15 The Subject in Question\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Note\n Chapter 16 Between Two Worlds: Nomadism and the Passion of an Encounter\n Chapter 17 Transposing NOISE and Voice\n Abstract\n Keywords\n I call the living\n I mourn the dead\n I break the lightning\n Notes\n Reference\n Chapter 18 Nomadic Encounters: Turning Difference Toward Dialogue\n Abstract\n Keywords\n References\n Chapter 19 On Farming the Liberal Arts\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Reform of graduate education\n More alliance within the disarray of liberal artisans\n More public love of our subjects\n A change in our name and thus in our identity\n Notes\n Chapter 20 . . . R. B. to Life\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Note\n References\n Multimedia\n Chapter 21 Nomadic Subjects and the Feminist Archives1\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Notes\n References\nPart 3 - The Ethics of the Nomad\n Chapter 22 Nomadic Subjects and Asylum Seekers\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Notes\n Chapter 23 Translating Selves: On Polyglot Cosmopolitanism\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Cartographies of selves\n On being polyglot\n On translation and cosmopolitanism\n Notes\n References\n Chapter 24 Nomadic Theory as an Epistemology for Transnational Feminist History\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Borders that matter: Feminism as a politics of location\n Narrating women’s and feminist history across time and space\n Notes\n References\n Chapter 25 The Struggle for Europe\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Notes\n References\n Chapter 26 Law’s Nomadic Subjects: Towards a Micropolitics of Posthuman Rights\n Abstract\n Keywords\n From human rights to posthuman rights\n Conclusion\n References\n Chapter 27 Collaboration\n Abstract\n Keywords\n Note\n Reference\nPostlude\n Chapter 28 The Untimely\n Passion for writing\n Feminism, philosophy, France\n The long march through the institutions\n Feminist genealogies\n Becoming-nomadic\n Writing the prehistory of a future\n Towards the posthumanities\n Being worthy of the times\n Notes\n References\n Rosi Braidotti Bibliography 1980–2013\n Index