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OverviewThis massive book is an intensive inquest into the fate of the human subject as it passes through the primitive, despotic, passional and capitalist regimes found in Deleuze and Guattari. Emphatic, acerbic, loquacious, impassioned, and marshaling a considerable array of theoretical and literary frameworks—from Schelling, Kantorowicz, Agamben, Hegel, Nietzsche, Badiou, Rosenzweig, Lévinas, Derrida, Blanchot, Kierkegaard, Marx, Lazzarato, Berardi, Žižek and Plotinus to Solzhenitsyn, Pessoa, Fuentes, Dostoyevsky, Kafka, Beckett, Mann, Schreber, Dante, Milton, Shakespeare, Sade, the Midrash and Kabbalah—and cavorting through vast expanses of world history, Bartosz Łubczonok scrutinizes the maladies of pain, resentment, bad conscience, ideology, immiseration, torture, death, depression and suicide that have and continue to afflict humanity, and the possibilities of its vertiginous liberation. All is here: the auto-genesis of God, the Crucifixion, the Holocaust, September 11. The Apotheosis of Nullity is a searing indictment of all forms of oppression and despotism, inclusive of neoliberal capitalism, and far surpasses any usage of Deleuze and Guattari to date. It is relentless. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bartosz ŁubczonokPublisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc Imprint: Peter Lang Publishing Inc Edition: New edition Volume: 226 Weight: 1.720kg ISBN: 9781433134654ISBN 10: 1433134659 Pages: 1028 Publication Date: 22 June 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements – Prologue: Eternity – PART I: The Primitive Regime – A Cruel Mnemotechnics – Toward an Ethics of the Primitive Regime and Beyond – PART II: The Despotic Regime – Emergence of the Despotic Machine –Transhistorical Sadeo-Deleuzian Fugue, 1. Despotic Paranoia – Trial by Ordeal and Homo Sacer – Despotic Dialectics of Subjective Self-Immural, 1. Hegel – Despotic Dialectics of Subjective Self-Immural, 2. Nietzsche – Exit Strategies from the Structures of Despotism, 1. Against Hegel: The Mosaic Revolution and St. Paul – Exit Strategies from the Structures of Despotism, 2. Against Nietzsche: Job and St. Paul – Exit Strategies from the Structures of Despotism, 3. Kafka as St. Paul – Demise of the Despot –PART III: The Passional Regime – The Vertiginous Foray into the Passional Regime – Essential Features of the Passional Regime – Transhistorical Sadeo-Deleuzian Fugue, 2. The Black Hole of Stochastic Death – Transhistorical Fugue, 3. From Jewish Survival to the Survival of Humanity – From the Violence of Divine Love to the Redemption of the World: Rosenzweig, Lévinas, Derrida, Blanchot, Kierkegaard – PART IV: The Capitalist Regime – The Eviscerations and Entrapments of Capital – From the Self-Crucifixion of the Capitalist Subject to the Empyrean – References – Index.ReviewsThis marvelously intricate, immensely intriguing book takes us to the heart of issues lying at the intersection of metaphysics, anthropology, social and political philosophy, as well as philosophy of literature. Its main theme-the becoming of subjectivity in the midst of physical, social and conceptual oppression-appears as one of the central topics of both modern and contemporary philosophy and literature. -Professor Marcin Poreba, University of Warsaw <> is a highly impressive piece of academic work. Most elegantly written, it is erudite and well-researched as well as original and deeply passionate. Most importantly, moving between theology and literature, between anthropology and political philosophy, Lubczonok never loses sight of his main subject-the human subject itself. -Professor Adam Lipszyc, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Science “This marvelously intricate, immensely intriguing book takes us to the heart of issues lying at the intersection of metaphysics, anthropology, social and political philosophy, as well as philosophy of literature. Its main theme—the becoming of subjectivity in the midst of physical, social and conceptual oppression—appears as one of the central topics of both modern and contemporary philosophy and literature.” —Professor Marcin Poręba, University of Warsaw “<> is a highly impressive piece of academic work. Most elegantly written, it is erudite and well-researched as well as original and deeply passionate. Most importantly, moving between theology and literature, between anthropology and political philosophy, Łubczonok never loses sight of his main subject—the human subject itself.” —Professor Adam Lipszyc, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Science Author InformationBartosz Łubczonok holds a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Warsaw, and a M.Sc. in mathematical statistics from Rhodes University. He lectured mathematical statistics at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University for 15 years. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |