The stuff of life / Timothy Morton
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publisher: Nueva York ; Londres Bloomsbury Academic, 2023Description: viii, 147 páginas ; 20 cmContent type:- texto
- sin mediación
- volumen
- 9781350240483
- GN406 M664 2023
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libros | Mediateca | Bibliográfica | GN406 M664 2023 Ej. 1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Ej. 1 | Available | 16527 |
Browsing Mediateca shelves, Collection: Bibliográfica Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
GN365.9 H3518 2018 Manifiesto para cyborgs : ciencia, tecnología y feminismo socialista a finales del siglo XX / | GN406 A33 2018 Ej. 1 Fewer, better things : the hidden wisdom of objects / | GN406 A33 2018 Ej. 2 Fewer, better things : the hidden wisdom of objects / | GN406 M664 2023 Ej. 1 The stuff of life / | GN407 C769 2018 Ej.1 Eating culture : an anthropological guide to food / | GN407 G78 2016 Ej. 1 Food design : exploring the future of food / | GN407 G78 2016 Ej. 2 Food design : exploring the future of food / |
Chapter 0: Roses -- Chapter 1: Electric Peanuts -- Chapter 2: Inner Bodyworker -- Chapter 3: Wimbledon Park Station -- Chapter 4: Oso -- Chapter 5: Secret Door -- Chapter 6: CPAP -- Chapter 7: Antidepressants -- Chapter 8: Concealer -- Chapter 9: Cowboy Costume -- Chapter 10: Battersea Power Station -- Chapter 11: Sound File -- Chapter 12: The Chicken -- Chapter 13: The Stuff of Life.
"There are many ways of telling the story of a life and how we've got to where we are. The questions of why and how we think the way we do continues to preoccupy philosophers. In The Stuff of Life, Timothy Morton chooses the objects that have shaped and punctuated their life to tell the story of who they are and why they might think the way they do. These objects are 'things' in the richest sense. They are beings, non-human beings, that have a presence and a force of their own. From the looming expanse of Battersea Power Station to a packet of anti-depressants and a cowboy suit, Morton explores why 'stuff' matters and the life of these things have so powerfully impinged upon their own. Their realization, through a concealer stick, that they identify as non-binary reveals the strange and wonderful ways that objects can form our worlds. Part memoir, part philosophical exploration of the meaning of a life lived alongside and through other things, Morton asks us to think about the stuff, things, objects and buildings that have formed our realities and who we are and might be." -- tomado de la contraportada.
There are no comments on this title.