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Thinking Catherine Malabou

Thinking Catherine Malabou

Thomas Wormald | Isabell Dahms

(2018)

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Abstract

This volume contributes to the growing body of literature exploring the work of contemporary French philosopher Catherine Malabou. Through its fifteen contributions, including two previously untranslated essays by Malabou, the volume explores the various ways in which Malabou's thought both performs and furnishes resources for the negotiation of philosophy's attachment and detachment from itself and other disciplines. What kind of interaction can philosophy have with either science or politics without conquering them? How does one carry out philosophy while subverting it, changing it, directing it on or opening it up to different pathways?

The chapters explore the detachment of Malabou from her own philosophical training in deconstruction, the theme of habit and the question of new attachments, detachments through the relation of Malabou's thought and science, and the detachments that transpire through philosophy's confrontation with politics. In order to have a future, philosophy must detach from its own tradition and passionately confront questions of race, gender, and colonialism.
Containing two previously untranslated essays by Malabou, Thinking Catherine Malabou deepens our understanding of this important, contemporary French philosopher. This is an invaluable collection of essays. The scholars assembled here clearly understand Malabou’s work and its impact on philosophy today. By showing us how Malabou’s thought detaches itself from philosophy, Thinking Catherine Malabou points the way in which philosophy must be reconfigured in the future.
Leonard Lawlor, Sparks Professor of Philosophy, Penn State University
Ever since Catherine Malabou dropped the bombshell of her first book on The Future of Hegel in the midst of the dominant anti-Hegelian consensus, she has continued to rise to the very top of the list of today's most creative and daring French philosophers. The present collection offers a complex and varied account of Malabou's passionate attachments to and detachments from deconstruction, psychoanalysis, phenomenology, materialism, and dialectics. Giving voice to a new generation of scholars and students of Malabou's work as well as her long-time translator, the volume also includes a fascinating original essay from the author about Heidegger and Lévi-Strauss. This collection is bound to become a standard reference work.
Bruno Bosteels, Professor of Latin American and Iberian Cultures, Columbia University
This volume offers a uniquely comprehensive engagement with Malabou’s philosophy and the multiple relations it opens up through its “passionate detachments”. Posing the question of the status of philosophy today and its relation to other disciplines such as science and politics, the essays collected here represent an indispensable contribution to the reception of this most exciting and important contemporary thinker.
Ian James, Reader in Modern French Literature and Thought, University of Cambridge
Isabell Dahms is a graduate student in the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Kingston University, UK.

Thomas Wormald is a graduate student in the Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism at Western University, Canada.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Thinking Catherine Malabou Cover
Contents v
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: Attaching and Detaching from Philosophy with Catherine Malabou 1
Watching Thinking Move: Malabou in Translation 11
Section 1: Detaching from Derrida? The Future of Deconstruction after Malabou 21
1 Is Science the Subject of Philosophy? Miller, Badiou, and Derrida Respond 23
2 “The Plasticity of Writing”: Malabou on the Limits of Grammatology 39
3 The “Image of Thought” at Dusk: Derridean-Husserlian Responsibility, Destructive Plasticity, and the Manifesto 57
Section 2: Are New Attachments Possible? On Habit and Habitual Returns 75
4 Habitual Propensity: Plastic or Elastic? An Encounter between Catherine Malabou and Sigmund Freud on the Phenomenon of Habit 77
5 Attached to Detachment: A Materialist Indifference in Catherine Malabou 95
6 Changing (Reading) Habits—Rereading Hegel Speculatively with Malabou 109
7 Habitués 123
Section 3: Toward A Passionate Philosophy 139
Part I: The Life of Science 141
8 After Deconstruction? The Challenge of Malabou’s Plastic Biohistory 143
9 The Plasticity of Empathy: A Materialist, Postphenomenological Critique of Einfühlung in Aesthetics, Phenomenology, and Contemporary Neuroscience 161
10 Event, Plasticity, and Mutation: Harnessing the Work of Malabou and Badiou in Support of a Molecular Event 181
Part II: The Politics of Philosophy 199
11 Reading Derrida’s Glas: A Queer Presence alongside Hegel 201
12 Plasticity of the Mind: Reflecting on and Discussing Marcus Aurelieus’s Meditations with Catherine Malabou 219
13 “The Still Missing People”: Thinking the Affective Work of Art in the Work of Gilles Deleuze, through Catherine Malabou’s Concept of Plasticity 237
14 Diagnosing the Sociopolitical Wound: Frantz Fanon and Catherine Malabou 253
Conclusion 273
15 Discontinuity and Difference: Heidegger and Lévi-Strauss 275
Index 287
About the Contributors 295