Richard Grusin
Genre
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The Nonhuman Turn
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published
2015
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7 editions
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Anthropocene Feminism
by
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published
2017
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3 editions
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Premediation: Affect and Mediality After 9/11
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published
2010
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5 editions
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After Extinction
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published
2018
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3 editions
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Culture, Technology, and the Creation of America's National Parks (Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture, Series Number 137) (Volume 0)
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published
2004
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6 editions
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Ends of Cinema (21st Century Studies)
by |
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Open 13: The Rise of the Informal Media: How Search Engines, Weblogs, and YouTube Change Public Opinion
by
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published
2008
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2 editions
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Jim Campbell: Material Light
by
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published
2010
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2 editions
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Transcendentalist Hermeneutics: Institutional Authority and the Higher Criticism of the Bible
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published
1990
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5 editions
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The Long 2020 (21st Century Studies)
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“Art, understood along these terms, is not yet about an object, about a form, or a content. It is still on its way, in its manner of becoming. It is intuition, in the Bergsonian sense. As Henri Bergson defines it, intuition is the art—the manner—in which the very conditions of experience are felt. Beyond the state (and the status quo), across the force of the actual, intuition touches on the decisive turn within experience in the making that activates a difference within time’s durational folds: intuition activates the proposition at the heart of the as yet unthought.”
― The Nonhuman Turn
― The Nonhuman Turn
“The art of time makes this more-than of the object felt, and it does so by activating the differential of time in the making, the difference between what was and what will be. For all actualization is in fact differentiation. The in-act is the dephasing of the process toward the coming into itself of an occasion of experience. In this dephasing, the differences in kind between the not-yet and the will-have-been are felt, but only at the edges of experience. They are felt in the moving, activating the more-than.”
― The Nonhuman Turn
― The Nonhuman Turn
“Desire has no particular object. It is a vector. Its object is before it, always to come. Desire vectorizes being toward the emergence of the new. Desire is one with the auto-conducting movement of becoming.”
― The Nonhuman Turn
― The Nonhuman Turn
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