hyposubjects: on becoming human, by Timothy Morton and Dominic Boyer - new book from Open Humanities Press
 Monday, March 22, 2021 at 12:52PM
Monday, March 22, 2021 at 12:52PM Announcing the publication of hyposubjects: on becoming human, by Timothy Morton and Dominic Boyer.

Like all Open Humanities Press books, hyposubjects is available for free:
http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/hyposubjects/
The time of hypersubjects is ending. Their  desert-apocalypse-fire-and-death cults aren’t going to save them this  time. Meanwhile the time of hyposubjects is just beginning. This text is  an exercise in chaotic and flimsy thinking that will possibly waste  your time. But it is the sincere effort of two reform-minded  hypersubjects to decenter themselves and to help nurture hyposubjective  humanity. Here are some of the things we say in this book: 1)  Hyposubjects are the native species of the Anthropocene and are only  just now beginning to discover what they might be and become. 2) Like  their hyperobjective environment, hyposubjects are also multiphasic and  plural: not-yet, neither here nor there, less than the sum of their  parts. They are, in other words, subscendent (moving toward relations)  rather than transcendent (rising above relations). They do not pursue or  pretend to absolute knowledge or language, let alone power. Instead  they play; they care; they adapt; they hurt; they laugh. 3) Hyposubjects  are necessarily feminist, colorful, queer, ecological, transhuman, and  intrahuman. They do not recognize the rule of  androleukoheteropetromodernity and the apex species behavior it  epitomizes and reinforces. But they also hold the bliss-horror of  extinction fantasies at bay, because hyposubjects’ befores, nows, and  afters are many. 4) Hyposubjects are squatters and bricoleuses. They  inhabit the cracks and hollows. They turn things inside out and work  miracles with scraps and remains. They unplug from carbon gridlife; they  hack and redistribute its stored energies for their own purposes. 5)  Hyposubjects make revolutions where technomodern radars can’t glimpse  them. They patiently ignore expert advice that they do not or cannot  exist. They are skeptical of efforts to summarize them, including  everything we have just said.
 
 hyposubjects is published in our Critical Climate Chaos:  Irreversibility series, which is edited by Tom Cohen and Claire Colebrook:   
 
 http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/series/ccc2-irreversibility/ 
 
 Author Bios
 
 Dominic Boyer is a writer, media maker and anthropologist. He currently  teaches at Rice University where he also served as Founding Director of  the Center for Energy and Environmental Research in the Human Sciences  (2013-2019). His most recent book is Energopolitics (Duke UP, 2019),  which is part of a collaborative duograph, “Wind and Power in the  Anthropocene,” with Cymene Howe, which studies the politics of wind  power development in Southern Mexico. With Howe, he also helped make a  documentary film about Iceland’s first major glacier (Okjökull) lost to  climate change, Not Ok: a little movie about a small glacier at the end  of the world (2018). In August 2019, together with Icelandic  collaborators, Boyer installed a memorial to Okjökull’s passing, an  event that attracted media attention from around the world. He is  pursuing anthropological research with floodies in Houston, Texas, and  on electric futures across the world. And he is developing a TV series,  Petropolis, about relations and reckonings in Houston TX.
 
 Timothy Morton is Rita Shea Guffey Chair in English at Rice University.  They have collaborated with Björk, Laurie Anderson, Jennifer Walshe,  Hrafnhildur Arnadottir, Sabrina Scott, Adam McKay, Jeff Bridges, Justin  Guariglia, Olafur Eliasson, and Pharrell Williams. Morton co-wrote and  appears in Living in the Future’s Past, a 2018 film about global warming  with Jeff Bridges. They are the author of the libretto for the opera  Time Time Time by Jennifer Walshe. They are the author of Being  Ecological (Penguin, 2018), Humankind: Solidarity with Nonhuman People  (Verso, 2017), Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence  (Columbia, 2016), Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism (Chicago, 2015),  Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World  (Minnesota, 2013), Realist Magic: Objects, Ontology, Causality (Open  Humanities, 2013), The Ecological Thought (Harvard, 2010), Ecology  without Nature (Harvard, 2007), eight other books and 250 essays on  philosophy, ecology, literature, music, art, architecture, design and  food. Morton’s work has been translated into 10 languages. In 2014,  Morton gave the Wellek Lectures in Theory. They blog regularly at  Ecology Without Nature.
 Gary Hall |  Comments Off  |
Gary Hall |  Comments Off  |   





