This article revisits the problematic of the cognitive mapping of capital by probing the affinity between two representational predicaments: the depopulated nature of images of human-altered landscapes in the “new topographics” photography and its epigones, and the current debate over the definition of the Anthropocene. It looks in Fredric Jameson’s treatment of the time of capital, and of the place therein of dead labor, for a clue to critically rethink both these phenomena, revealing their profound affinity in the aporia besetting our thinking of historical agency under capitalist conditions. The article concludes with a brief reflection on what it might mean to define communism in this light as the “resurrection of dead labor.
For more than a decade, a movement has been gathering steam among geoscientists to designate an Anth...
In this article, we analyze the concept of Anthropocene in Bernard Stiegler's work through the cross...
In the first years of the 21st century Earth was being influenced by forces greater than our own an...
The absence of a reflection on revolutionary practices and subjects is the main weakness of the radi...
The article argues that the work of literary theorist Mikhail M. Bakhtin presents a starting point f...
How can we visualise and subsequently reimagine the abstraction that is the extinction of human spec...
We live in times of anthropogenic climate crisis. Or do we? This essay shows how “humanity” is a tho...
Regardless of the final fitting of the Anthropocene in the Geologic Time Scale, conceptualizing the ...
The article discusses the notion of the Anthropocene as a kind of anthropological machine, closely r...
The rapidly growing transdisciplinary enthusiasm about developing new kinds of Anthropocene stories ...
‘When’ is the Anthropocene and who are its subjects? This article seeks to demonstrate the ways in w...
"The idea of the Anthropocene often generates an overwhelming sense of abjection or apathy. It occup...
This article challenges the urge within Actor-Network Theory, posthumanism, and the ontological turn...
The manifestation of the Anthropocene is conditioned by and a condition of an entangled visuality. T...
This paper examines the recent proposal to christen our geological epoch “the Anthropocene.” The rea...
For more than a decade, a movement has been gathering steam among geoscientists to designate an Anth...
In this article, we analyze the concept of Anthropocene in Bernard Stiegler's work through the cross...
In the first years of the 21st century Earth was being influenced by forces greater than our own an...
The absence of a reflection on revolutionary practices and subjects is the main weakness of the radi...
The article argues that the work of literary theorist Mikhail M. Bakhtin presents a starting point f...
How can we visualise and subsequently reimagine the abstraction that is the extinction of human spec...
We live in times of anthropogenic climate crisis. Or do we? This essay shows how “humanity” is a tho...
Regardless of the final fitting of the Anthropocene in the Geologic Time Scale, conceptualizing the ...
The article discusses the notion of the Anthropocene as a kind of anthropological machine, closely r...
The rapidly growing transdisciplinary enthusiasm about developing new kinds of Anthropocene stories ...
‘When’ is the Anthropocene and who are its subjects? This article seeks to demonstrate the ways in w...
"The idea of the Anthropocene often generates an overwhelming sense of abjection or apathy. It occup...
This article challenges the urge within Actor-Network Theory, posthumanism, and the ontological turn...
The manifestation of the Anthropocene is conditioned by and a condition of an entangled visuality. T...
This paper examines the recent proposal to christen our geological epoch “the Anthropocene.” The rea...
For more than a decade, a movement has been gathering steam among geoscientists to designate an Anth...
In this article, we analyze the concept of Anthropocene in Bernard Stiegler's work through the cross...
In the first years of the 21st century Earth was being influenced by forces greater than our own an...