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Speculative Affect

Speculative Affect

Objects and Emotions
Herausgegeben von:Eddy, Charmaine

Inhalt

Speculative Affect: Objects and Emotions is an edited collection examining the intersection between affect and objects in the fields of literature, cultural theory, and cultural production. The word “speculative” in the title references recent philosophical and cultural work in the “speculative turn,” a philosophical field that includes speculative realism, new materialisms, “thing” theory, or object-oriented ontology, where the object is analyzed apart from human consciousness and human use-value. By linking this return to an ontological object realism beyond human consciousness with affect theory’s reimagining of corporeality by exploring attachments, bodily sensations, autonomic responses, and emotions as embodied forces beyond conscious knowing, this work addresses the last frontier in radically reconfiguring the status of human life – the division and hierarchy between so-called inert material and the apparent “superiority” of humanity.

 

Charmaine Eddy is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada, where she teaches modern American literature, Black literary studies, and literary and cultural theory. She has published several articles on new materialisms and hoarding, including “The Art of Consumption: Capitalist Excess and Individual Psychosis in Hoarders” in Canadian Review of American Studies and “Trash and Aesthetics in the Hoard” in NANO: New American Notes Online. 'She also has a forthcoming monograph on William Faulkner, States of Racial Abjection: Writing the Liminal South in William Faulkner’s Later Fiction, accepted for publication by the University of Mississippi Press.

Bibliografische Angaben

April 2025, ca. 254 Seiten, Palgrave Studies in Affect Theory and Literary Criticism, Englisch
Springer International Publishing
978-3-031-72166-3

Schlagworte

Weitere Titel der Reihe: Palgrave Studies in Affect Theory and Literary Criticism

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