The Biopolitics of Embryos and Alphabets
A Reproductive History of the Nonhuman
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:14th Sep '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£33.49(9780190638368)
In recent decades there has been an explosion in work in the social and physical sciences describing the similarities between human and nonhuman as well as human and non-animal thinking. This work has explicitly decentered the brain as the sole, self-contained space of thought, and it has found thinking to be an activity that operates not only across bodies but also across bodily or cellular membranes, as well as multifaceted organic and inorganic environments. For example, researchers have looked at the replication and spread of slime molds (playfully asking what would happen if they colonized the earth) to suggest that they exhibit 'smart behavior' in the way they move as a potential way of considering the spread of disease across the globe. Other scholars have applied this model of non-human thought to the reach of data mining and global surveillance. In The Biopolitics of Alphabets and Embryos, Ruth Miller argues that these types of phenomena are also useful models for thinking about the growth, reproduction, and spread of political thought and democratic processes. Giving slime, data and unbounded entities their political dues, Miller stresses their thinking power and political significance and thus challenges the anthropocentrism of mainstream democratic theories. Miller emphasizes the non-human as highly organized, systemic and productive of democratic growth and replication. She examines developments such as global surveillance, embryonic stem cell research, and cloning, which have been characterized as threats to the privacy, dignity, and integrity of the rational, maximizing and freedom-loving democratic citizen. By shifting her level of analysis from the politics of self-determining subjects to the realm of material environments and information systems, Miller asks what might happen if these alternative, nonhuman thought processes become the normative thought processes of democratic engagement.
"Ruth Miller has constructed a multi-layered text that reflects the complexity of her mind, the wealth of her bibliographical knowledge and, more importantly, her intellectual passion. This is an important and timely book." -Rosi Braidotti, author of The Posthuman "Ruth Miller has written the book that every academic secretly wants to write. This paradigm shattering book challenges conventional methods and complacencies with a vibrantly creative approach that is itself both art and argument. In the end, The Biopolitics of Embryos and Alphabets is a manifesto for the future of critical and political theory." -John Parry, Edward Brunet Professor of Law, Lewis & Clark Law School
ISBN: 9780190638351
Dimensions: 160mm x 236mm x 18mm
Weight: 471g
200 pages