Levi Bryant: Denaturing Nature: Talk at SPACE Gallery

2 July 2012
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SPACE host a lec­ture by Levi R. Bry­ant on the 5th of July at 6.30pm: Bry­ant is a lead­ing thinker in the emer­ging fields of Object Ori­ented Onto­logy and Spec­u­lat­ive Real­ism. The talk sug­gestes that nature must be dena­tured, but without abandon­ing nature. Rather than absorb­ing nature into cul­ture and lan­guage, cul­ture should instead be absorbed into nature in such a way as to show that there’s only nature.

This talk pro­poses a post-​Galilean/​Post-​Darwinian con­cep­tion of nature in which nature is under­stood as all that exists, includ­ing the cul­tural and social, and where nature is con­tin­gent, his­tor­ical, and cre­at­ive. This account of nature is con­tras­ted with the pre-​Modern and Mod­ern concept of nature, where nature is treated as some­thing that is out­side of cul­ture and where it is rhet­or­ic­ally and ideo­lo­gic­ally used as a tool to legit­im­ize vari­ous forms of oppres­sion and pre­vent eman­cip­at­ory pro­jects. The post-​Galilean/​post-​Darwinian account of nature under­mines such ideo­lo­gical ges­tures and defends an account of nature where soci­et­ies are them­selves under­stood as eco­lo­gies depend­ent upon a broader nat­ural world and where social iden­tit­ies are nat­ural con­struc­tions or inven­tions with a real­ity of their own.

Levi R. Bryant’s thoughts on a wide vari­ety of sub­jects includ­ing onto­logy, eco­logy, psy­cho­ana­lysis, aes­thet­ics and polit­ics appear reg­u­larly on his blog Lar­val Sub­jects. He is also the author of Dif­fer­ence and Given­ness: Deleuze’s Tran­scend­ental Empir­i­cism and the Onto­logy of Imman­ence, The Demo­cracy of Objects and co-​editor of The Spec­u­lat­ive Turn, with Nick Srnicek and Gra­ham Har­man. A former Lacanian psy­cho­ana­lyst, Bry­ant is now Pro­fessor of Philo­sophy at Col­lin Col­lege, Texas.

This event is organ­ised in col­lab­or­a­tion with Rory Rowan. Rowan recently com­pleted his PhD at the Depart­ment of Geo­graphy, Royal Hol­lo­way, Uni­ver­sity of Lon­don, where he worked on the concept of space in the thought of Carl Schmitt. His writ­ings on art, geo­philo­sophy and polit­ics have appeared in a num­ber of online and print publications.

Doors 6:30 /​Talk 7pm:

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