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  1. Hope after ‘the end of the world’: rethinking critique in the Anthropocene.Pol Bargués, David Chandler, Sebastian Schindler & Valerie Waldow - forthcoming - Contemporary Political Theory:1-18.
    Many contemporary thinkers of the Anthropocene, who attempt to articulate a non-modern and relational ontology, all too readily dismiss critical theory inherited from the Frankfurt School for being anthropocentric, failing to acknowledge certain basic similarities. Instead, this article argues that the scaffolding of Anthropocene thinking—the recognition of the origins of the contemporary condition of ‘loss of world’ and the hope of ‘living on in the ruins’—share much with earlier critical theorists’ recognition that the Holocaust necessitated a fundamental break with the (...)
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  • In the Air of the Natural History Museum: On Corporate Entanglement and Responsibility in Uncontained Times.Lilian Moncrieff - 2020 - Law and Critique 31 (3):253-273.
    This paper discusses corporate entanglement, impactfulness and responsibility in the Anthropocene, amidst events and conditions that ‘uncontain’ time. It takes its direction of travel from artist Brian Jungen’s ‘Cetology’ (2002), a whalebone sculpture made out of cut-up plastic garden chairs, which conjoins the times of earth and world history, as it hangs in the air of the art gallery, ‘as if’ exhibited in the natural history museum. The paper relates ‘Cetology’s’ engagement with natural history, time, and commodification to matters of (...)
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  • Two sorts of natural history: On a central concept in critical theory and ethical naturalism.Philip Hogh - 2022 - European Journal of Philosophy 30 (4):1248-1267.
    The concept of natural history has received a great deal of attention in contemporary practical philosophy, especially as a result of Michael Thompson's concept of natural-historical judgments which aims to explain the normativity of the human life-form. With this concept, the norms effective in a life-form are understood as something natural and constitutive for that life-form. Although Thompson does not present a historical-philosophical model, he claims to be able to determine the normativity of the historically developing human life-form. By contrast, (...)
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