This article brings the writing of Marie Darrieussecq into dialogue with the philosophy of Catherine Malabou, exploring how both think the mutability and transformability of the body in relation to recent scientific and technological discovery and innovation. From the metamorphosis of a woman into a sow in Truismes (1996) to the cloning of human life in Notre vie dans les forêts (2017), Darrieussecq’s novels foreground the body as a site of constant change and reinvention. Meanwhile, Malabou’s interdisciplinary elaboration of the concept of ‘plasticity’ between continental thought and the biological sciences reveals all structures and forms of life to be plastic and intrinsically open to change, from the neuroplasticity of the human brain t...
This article establishes that reparation from grief is a process of “working through” trauma in whic...
This research is based on the political thought of the french philosopher Michel Foucault (1926-1984...
“Our brain is plastic, and we do not know it,” says French philosopher Catherine Malabou. This artic...
This article stages an encounter between Catherine Malabou’s plasticité and Georges Bataille’s infor...
Philosopher Catherine Malabou’s elaboration of plasticity has taken several forms: from her material...
The article deals with the notion of 'dialiects' as expressed by the philosophical work by Catherine...
This article inscribes Catherine Malabou's recent philosophical account of brain plasticity in a gen...
Catherine Malabou's concept of plasticity has influenced and inspired scholars from across disciplin...
This article stages encounters between the contemporary French philosopher Catherine Malabou and the...
Dialektyczna koncepcja rewolucyjności podkreśla jej podwójny charakter. Zarówno w wersji konserwatyw...
The theorizing of utopia is a persistent theme throughout several generations of the French continen...
One of the contemporary trends marking our current moment in theory is the call for the elaboration ...
Review Article: Catherine Malabou, The Future of Hegel: Plasticity, Temporality and Dialecti...
In a series of recent interventions Catherine Malabou, the contemporary French philosophy of “plasti...
The article focuses on the contemporary French author Marie Darrieussecq’s dystopian novel, Truismes...
This article establishes that reparation from grief is a process of “working through” trauma in whic...
This research is based on the political thought of the french philosopher Michel Foucault (1926-1984...
“Our brain is plastic, and we do not know it,” says French philosopher Catherine Malabou. This artic...
This article stages an encounter between Catherine Malabou’s plasticité and Georges Bataille’s infor...
Philosopher Catherine Malabou’s elaboration of plasticity has taken several forms: from her material...
The article deals with the notion of 'dialiects' as expressed by the philosophical work by Catherine...
This article inscribes Catherine Malabou's recent philosophical account of brain plasticity in a gen...
Catherine Malabou's concept of plasticity has influenced and inspired scholars from across disciplin...
This article stages encounters between the contemporary French philosopher Catherine Malabou and the...
Dialektyczna koncepcja rewolucyjności podkreśla jej podwójny charakter. Zarówno w wersji konserwatyw...
The theorizing of utopia is a persistent theme throughout several generations of the French continen...
One of the contemporary trends marking our current moment in theory is the call for the elaboration ...
Review Article: Catherine Malabou, The Future of Hegel: Plasticity, Temporality and Dialecti...
In a series of recent interventions Catherine Malabou, the contemporary French philosophy of “plasti...
The article focuses on the contemporary French author Marie Darrieussecq’s dystopian novel, Truismes...
This article establishes that reparation from grief is a process of “working through” trauma in whic...
This research is based on the political thought of the french philosopher Michel Foucault (1926-1984...
“Our brain is plastic, and we do not know it,” says French philosopher Catherine Malabou. This artic...