Notes from the Crawl Room - A.M. Moskovitz

Notes from the Crawl Room

A Collection of Philosophical Horrors

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
192 Seiten
2021
Bloomsbury Academic (Verlag)
978-1-350-19188-4 (ISBN)
28,65 inkl. MwSt
Notes from the Crawl Room employs the lens and methods of horror writing to critique the excesses and absurdities of philosophy. Each story reveals disastrous and de-humanising effects of philosophies that are separated from real, lived experience (e.g. the absurdity of arguing over a sentence in Kant while the world burns around us). From a Kafkaesque exploration of administrative absurdities to the horrors of discursive violence, white supremacy and the living spectres of patriarchy, A.M. Moskovitz doesn't shy away from addressing the complex aspects of our lives. In addition to offering often humourous critiques of philosophy, these works are also, somewhat ironically, pieces of philosophy themselves. Each story seeks to move a subject area forward offering the reader the capacity to think through ideas in a weirder and more open way than traditional philosophy usually allows.

An antidote to philosophy that seeks to close down and shut off the imaginative potential of human thought, Notes from the Crawl Room revels in the unsettling and creative potential of stories for revealing what thinking philosophically might really mean.

Adam Ferner has worked in academic philosophy in France and the UK. He is author of Organisms and Personal Identity (2016), Think Differently: Open your mind. Philosophy for Modern Life: 20 Thought-Provoking Lessons (2018), How to Disagree: Negotiate difference in a divided world.: 20 thought-provoking lessons (with Darren Chetty, 2019), Philosophy: A Crash Course: Become An Instant Expert (with Zara Bain and Nadia Mehdi, 2019) and Philosophical Empires (with Chris Meyns, 2020). Adam is also Associate Editor of the Forum Essays, and founding member of the Changelings fiction collective. His horror series 'Campus Rumpus' was published in The Philosopher's Magazine. Katherine Angel is a writer and Lecturer in Creative Writing at Birkbeck, University of London. She is author of Unmastered: A Book on Desire, Most Difficult to Tell (2012) and Daddy Issues (2019)

Introductory Essay: Uroborotic Horror by Susan K. Lang

1. The Ring of Gyges
2. Cousin Vincent
3. By which we learn that “Snow is white”
4. Empty Man I: The German Logician (1902)
5. The Gravesend Institute
6. A Response to C.D. Baird’s Reading of the Pitwell Phenomenon
7. Empty Man II: Theodore (1999)
8. Bare Substrata
9. such brittle bodies
10. Empty Man III: Marcia (2010)
11. The Locked Room
12. Campus Rumpus I–V
13. The Master’s Delight
14. Cloakroom, 1984
15. Empty Man IV: Abbie (2018)
16. Mycorrhizae
17. A Manifesto for Horror As Critique of Analytic Philosophy

Appendix I: Recurring Characters
Appendix II: Quotations
Select Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Credits

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 138 x 216 mm
Gewicht 248 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Erkenntnistheorie / Wissenschaftstheorie
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
ISBN-10 1-350-19188-4 / 1350191884
ISBN-13 978-1-350-19188-4 / 9781350191884
Zustand Neuware
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