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Accidental Agents

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Martin Crowley argues that a new conception of agency as both distributed and decisive is necessary in the Anthropocene. A major intervention into ongoing debates in posthumanism, political ecology...
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  • 08 February 2022
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In the Anthropocene, the fact that human activity is enmeshed with the existence and actions of every kind of other being is inescapable. As a result, the planetary ecological crisis has brought forth an urgent need to rethink understandings of human action. One response holds that the transformations necessary to tackle today’s crises will emerge from the distinctive capacity of human beings to transcend their environment. Another school of thought calls for seeing action as composite, produced by distributed networks of human and nonhuman agents. Yet the first of these is open to charges of human exceptionalism, while the second, according to its critics, lacks effective political traction.

Martin Crowley argues that a new conception of political agency is necessary to break this impasse. Engaging with thinkers such as Bruno Latour, Bernard Stiegler, and Catherine Malabou, Crowley proposes an original account of agency as both distributed and decisive. Challenging the prevailing view of agency as exclusively human, he explores how a politics that incorporates nonhuman agency can intervene in the real world, examining timely issues such as climate-related migration and digital-algorithmic politics. A major intervention into ongoing debates in posthumanism, political ecology, and political theory, Accidental Agents reshapes our understanding of political agency in and for a more-than-human world.

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Price: $130.00
Pages: 296
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Insurrections: Critical Studies in Religion, Politics, and Culture
Publication Date: 08 February 2022
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780231204026
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: PHILOSOPHY / Political, NATURE / Animal Rights, POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory
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Martin Crowley's exploration of ’agency’—the power to inflect action in a meaningful way—is fascinating, original, and impressive. He provides lucid interpretations of three important efforts to reconceive agency as distributed rather than as the exclusive property of a human individual or group—those of Bruno Latour, Bernard Stiegler, and Catherine Malabou—while also carrying some elements forward into his own theory of agency, decision, and political action. Accidental Agents is a truly excellent book.
— Jane Bennett, author of Influx and Efflux: Writing Up with Walt Whitman

Accidental Agents is a piece in a giant puzzle, presenting ways of thinking that, while by no means insignificant, no longer stand alone in conceptualizing what an 'antagonistic alliance' looks like.
Martin Crowley is professor of modern French thought and culture at the University of Cambridge, where he is also Anthony L. Lyster Fellow in Modern and Medieval Languages at Queens’ College. He serves as general editor of the journal French Studies.

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Bruno Latour: “We Have to Agree to Talk About War”
Horizon 1. Antagonistic Alliances
2. Bernard Stiegler: Deciding on the Accident
Horizon 2. At the Speed of the Digital Algorithm
3. Catherine Malabou: “There Is Nothing Beforehand”
Conclusion
Works Cited
Index