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Object-Oriented Feminism
About this book
The essays in Object-Oriented Feminism explore OOF: a feminist intervention into recent philosophical discourses—like speculative realism, object-oriented ontology (OOO), and new materialism—that take objects, things, stuff, and matter as primary. Object-oriented feminism approaches all objects from the inside-out position of being an object too, with all of its accompanying political and ethical potentials.
This volume places OOF thought in a long history of ongoing feminist work in multiple disciplines. In particular, object-oriented feminism foregrounds three significant aspects of feminist thinking in the philosophy of things: politics, engaging with histories of treating certain humans (women, people of color, and the poor) as objects; erotics, employing humor to foment unseemly entanglements between things; and ethics, refusing to make grand philosophical truth claims, instead staking a modest ethical position that arrives at being “in the right” by being “wrong.”
Seeking not to define object-oriented feminism but rather to enact it, the volume is interdisciplinary in approach, with contributors from a variety of fields, including sociology, anthropology, English, art, and philosophy. Topics are frequently provocative, engaging a wide range of theorists from Heidegger and Levinas to Irigaray and Haraway, and an intriguing diverse array of objects, including the female body as fetish object in Lolita subculture; birds made queer by endocrine disruptors; and truth claims arising in material relations in indigenous fiction and film. Intentionally, each essay can be seen as an “object” in relation to others in this collection.
Contributors: Irina Aristarkhova, University of Michigan; Karen Gregory, University of Edinburgh; Marina Gržini?, Slovenian Academy of Science and Arts; Frenchy Lunning, Minneapolis College of Art and Design; Timothy Morton, Rice University; Anne Pollock, Georgia Tech; Elizabeth A. Povinelli, Columbia University; R. Joshua Scannell, CUNY Graduate Center; Adam Zaretsky, VASTAL.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- An Introduction to OOF
- 1. A Feminist Object
- 2. All Objects Are Deviant: Feminism and Ecological Intimacy
- 3. Allure and Abjection: The Possible Potential of Severed Qualities
- 4. The World Is Flat and Other Super Weird Ideas
- 5. Facing Necrophilia, or “Botox Ethics”
- 6. OOPS: Object-Oriented Psychopathia Sexualis
- 7. Queering Endocrine Disruption
- 8. Political Feminist Positioning in Neoliberal Global Capitalism
- 9. In the Cards: From Hearing “Things” to Human Capital
- 10. Both a Cyborg and a Goddess: Deep Managerial Time and Informatic Governance
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors