Beyond Human: From Animality to Transhumanism (Paperback)
Dr Charlie Blake (editor), Dr. Claire Molloy (editor), Steven Shakespeare (editor)Published: 10/05/2012
This title explores the implications of our animal origins and posthuman futures for our understanding of our humanity and our relations with other species. "Beyond Human" investigates what it means to call ourselves human beings in relation to both our distant past and our possible futures as a species, and the questions this might raise for our relationship with the myriad species with which we share the planet. Drawing on insights from zoology, theology, cultural studies and aesthetics, an international line-up of contributors explore such topics as our origins as reflected in early cave art in the upper Palaeolithic through to our prospects at the forefront of contemporary biotechnology. In the process, the book positions 'the human' in readiness for what many have characterized as our transhuman or posthuman future. For if our status as rational animals or 'animals that think' has traditionally distinguished us as apparently superior to other species, this distinction has become increasingly problematic. It has come to be seen as based on skills and technologies that do not distinguish us so much as position us as transitional animals.
It is the direction and consequences of this transition that is the central concern of "Beyond Human".
Publisher: Continuum Publishing Corporation
ISBN: 9781441150110
Number of pages: 312
Weight: 392 g
Dimensions: 216 x 138 mm
MEDIA REVIEWS
This fascinating collection of essays is often challenging and always engaging.Drawing on an astonishing breadth of approaches this book offers a stimulating exploration of what it means to be both embodied human and animal in an increasingly post-human world. From the opening chapter with its provocative idea of handing animals tools for their own, much needed, revolution through to the final chapter which unsettlingly forces the reader to consider human-technological melding, this book will force to you see - and think about the world - differently. - Nik Taylor, Senior Lecturer, Sociology, Flinders University, Australia
The chapters in this incisive collection offer important challenges to anthropocentric prejudices - just as the title promises, readers are taken "beyond human." Vivid, passionate, ethically-charged critical writing embodies resistance to fixed ideas that diminish other animals. Boundaries are contested and conventions are transgressed as these writers celebrate a consciousness that displaces man as the measure of all things. This memorable and important compilation of scholarship creatively advances the agenda of human-animal studies. - Randy Malamud, Professor and Associate Chair, Modern Literature, Ecocriticism, and Cultural Studies, Georgia State University, Atlanta, USA
This is a fascinating collection of thoughtfully subversive essays, which range over art and philosophy, science and literature, evolution and ethics, the sacred and the divine. Bringing into creative contact the pressing questions of, on the one hand, animals and animality and, on the other, technology and transhumanism, they urge the reader to move beyond humanist hang-ups, beyond anthroponormative assumptions, indeed, beyond the human. - Tom Tyler, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy and Culture, Oxford Brookes University, UK
Taken together, the essays in this collection offer a persuasive argument for what should count in crafting a politics for transitional animals and their reciprocal others. - Culture Machine, July 2012
This wide-ranging volume explores the historical and futural limits of the human subject: its constitutive animality and its technological transformation … [T]he collection’s distinctiveness is in the way it combines the earthly concerns of “the animal turn” with more otherworldly discourses, such as the oft-ignored reflections of theologians, and the technoscientific fantasies and realities of transhumanists … Alongside its intersection of themes and multidisciplinarity, a distinguishing strength of the book is that it does not shirk the question of human distinctiveness … Ultimately, it collects a series of intriguing and provocative forays that suggest and mark out new terrains for scholarship in the theoretical humanities. - Matthew Chrulew, Centre for Culture and Technology, Curtin University, Australia, Anthrozoös
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