Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World

This dissertation addresses the political form of the human, its multiply-stratified nature, and the world it makes up - by focusing first on a tension between two broad kinds of approaches in philosophy of race that intend to unmake that stratification. One, called counterhumanism and exemplified b...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Berti, Daniel Jonathan
Other Authors: Hull, George
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Philosophy 2022
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613164008374272
access_status_str Open Access
author Berti, Daniel Jonathan
author2 Hull, George
author_browse Berti, Daniel Jonathan
Hull, George
author_facet Hull, George
Berti, Daniel Jonathan
author_sort Berti, Daniel Jonathan
collection Thesis
description This dissertation addresses the political form of the human, its multiply-stratified nature, and the world it makes up - by focusing first on a tension between two broad kinds of approaches in philosophy of race that intend to unmake that stratification. One, called counterhumanism and exemplified by the work of Sylvia Wynter, is deeply prevalent in antiracist struggles, and argues that a false image of the human is at the core of oppression, that a new, all-inclusive image must be fostered to replace it. The other, nonhumanism, emerges from some Deleuzo-Guattarian scholarship as a contingent critique of transcendence – value frameworks imposed from outside – and argues that no model is adequate to the complexity of reality - that State thought, the kind of thinking involved in such modelling, is inherently conservative rather than liberatory, maintaining a more fundamental oppressive element. The second part of the dissertation teases out some core developments in Achille Mbembe's conceptual and historical cartography of race and the human in Critique of Black Reason (2017), ones that avoid the issue of transcendence in counterhumanism. On his account, contemporary race begins with the European creation of an enclosure that claims humanness for itself, excluding those from the World-outside. Through negative resentment critique and positive critiques based in calculated creation (e.g. religious and artistic), Mbembe resolves the tension in creating an immanent counterhuman as dis-enclosed world, through immanent and transversal thinking. The political form of the human as understood here is fundamentally tied to all aspects of human relations, and as such when changed will come with a corresponding fundamental change in our political arrangements. This final part of the dissertation expands Mbembe's human as the Open world, to outline the various social and political arrangements compossible with it. This part answers how we may organise ourselves politically to seek humanness in the present, less-than-human, enclosed world. What we will find, through an engagement with a range of anarchist and anarchistic theory, is that Mbembe's Open World has deep resonances with the world sought by anarchists; it is an anarchic world rooted in a prefigurative practice that un-forecloses the future.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35565
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:47.142Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Philosophy
publisherStr Department of Philosophy
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35565 Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World Berti, Daniel Jonathan Hull, George Gray van Heerden, Chantelle Philosophy This dissertation addresses the political form of the human, its multiply-stratified nature, and the world it makes up - by focusing first on a tension between two broad kinds of approaches in philosophy of race that intend to unmake that stratification. One, called counterhumanism and exemplified by the work of Sylvia Wynter, is deeply prevalent in antiracist struggles, and argues that a false image of the human is at the core of oppression, that a new, all-inclusive image must be fostered to replace it. The other, nonhumanism, emerges from some Deleuzo-Guattarian scholarship as a contingent critique of transcendence – value frameworks imposed from outside – and argues that no model is adequate to the complexity of reality - that State thought, the kind of thinking involved in such modelling, is inherently conservative rather than liberatory, maintaining a more fundamental oppressive element. The second part of the dissertation teases out some core developments in Achille Mbembe's conceptual and historical cartography of race and the human in Critique of Black Reason (2017), ones that avoid the issue of transcendence in counterhumanism. On his account, contemporary race begins with the European creation of an enclosure that claims humanness for itself, excluding those from the World-outside. Through negative resentment critique and positive critiques based in calculated creation (e.g. religious and artistic), Mbembe resolves the tension in creating an immanent counterhuman as dis-enclosed world, through immanent and transversal thinking. The political form of the human as understood here is fundamentally tied to all aspects of human relations, and as such when changed will come with a corresponding fundamental change in our political arrangements. This final part of the dissertation expands Mbembe's human as the Open world, to outline the various social and political arrangements compossible with it. This part answers how we may organise ourselves politically to seek humanness in the present, less-than-human, enclosed world. What we will find, through an engagement with a range of anarchist and anarchistic theory, is that Mbembe's Open World has deep resonances with the world sought by anarchists; it is an anarchic world rooted in a prefigurative practice that un-forecloses the future. 2022-01-25T10:50:41Z 2022-01-25T10:50:41Z 2021 2022-01-25T08:55:37Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35565 eng application/pdf Department of Philosophy Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Philosophy
Berti, Daniel Jonathan
Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World
title_full Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World
title_fullStr Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World
title_full_unstemmed Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World
title_short Establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un-foreclosure of the future: Deleuze, Mbembe, Hartman and the anarchic Open World
title_sort establishing an immanent counterhumanism for the un foreclosure of the future deleuze mbembe hartman and the anarchic open world
topic Philosophy
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35565
work_keys_str_mv AT bertidanieljonathan establishinganimmanentcounterhumanismfortheunforeclosureofthefuturedeleuzembembehartmanandtheanarchicopenworld