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The Memory of the World: Deep Time, Animality, and Eschatology (Volume 70)

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Advancing a phenomenological approach to deep time
  Our imagination today is dominated by the end of the world, from sci-fi and climate fiction to actual predictions of biodiversity collapse, climate disruption, and the emergence of the Anthropocene. This obsession with the world’s precarity, The Memory of the World contends, relies on a flawed understanding of time that neglects the past and present with the goal of managing the future. Not only does this mislead sustainability efforts, it diminishes our encounters with the world and with human and nonhuman others.   Here, Ted Toadvine takes a phenomenological approach to deep time to show how our apocalyptic imagination forgets the sublime and uncanny dimensions of the geological past and far future. Guided by original readings of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Emmanuel Levinas, Jacques Derrida, Jean-Luc Nancy, and others, he suggests that reconciling our embodied lives with the memory of the earth transforms our relationship with materiality, other forms of life, and the unprecedented future.   Integrating insights from phenomenology, deconstruction, critical animal studies, and new materialism, The Memory of the World argues for a new philosophy of time that takes seriously the multiple, pleated, and entangled temporal events spanning cosmic, geological, evolutionary, and human durations.

348 pages, Paperback

Published May 14, 2024

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Ted Toadvine

21 books

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289 reviews1 follower
December 29, 2024
This is a deliciously dense and well-argued phenomenology of deep time. After reading the book slowly, I am left with twenty pages of single-spaced notes that I need to commit to memory: concepts like “world,” “nature,” and even “time” itself can be slippery, as Toadvine shows. Next to helping readers understand how we can think scales of human and deep time together (and leave behind all that "incommensurability" stuff once encounters everywhere in posthumanist writing), The Memory of the World provides a deep dive into the limits of what (and how) phenomenology can think, critically discusses ecocritical approaches to geological time and the planetary, and, incidentally, manages to rejigger ontology itself. Beautiful!
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