homo mimeticus iii
catherine malabou, kristian schaeferling, alex obrigewitsch, mathijs peters, gabriel wartinger, tom boland, alice iacobone, sergey zenkin, ian james, ida djursaa, tyler williams
This is the third volume of a trilogy on Homo Mimeticus, yet in no way does it seek to bring mimetic studies to an end. On the contrary, the ambition of this book is to further the mimetic turn via a new beginning. In collaboration with the French philosopher Catherine Malabou, international contributors argue that plasticity—understood in its double capacity to receive form and to give form—plays a transformative role in the many lives of homo mimeticus qua homo plasticus. Ranging from philosophy to literature, sociology to semiology, the plastic arts to neurobiology, and addressing subjects as diverse as epigenetic mimesis and neuroliterature, plastic figures and the mimetic subconscious, Homo Mimeticus III shows that both new materialisms and mimetic studies are central to affirming plastic metamorphoses in the twenty-first century.

In collaboration with Catherine Malabou

This is the third volume of a trilogy on Homo Mimeticus, yet in no way does it seek to bring mimetic studies to an end. On the contrary, the ambition of this book is to further the mimetic turn via a new beginning. In collaboration with the French philosopher Catherine Malabou, international contributors argue that plasticity—understood in its double capacity to receive form and to give form—plays a transformative role in the many lives of homo mimeticus qua homo plasticus. Ranging from philosophy to literature, sociology to semiology, the plastic arts to neurobiology, and addressing subjects as diverse as epigenetic mimesis and neuroliterature, plastic figures and the mimetic subconscious, Homo Mimeticus III shows that both new materialisms and mimetic studies are central to affirming plastic metamorphoses in the twenty-first century.

In collaboration with Catherine Malabou

Nidesh Lawtoo is a philosopher and cultural critic, professor of Modern European Literature and Culture at Leiden University.

Willow Verkerk is lecturer in Continental Philosophy and Social Philosophy at the University of British Columbia.

Homo Mimeticus III is a major contribution to contemporary thought. Through elegant argumentation, intellectual range, and remarkable conceptual inventiveness, the volume reanimates and redefines the relation between mimesis and plasticity for an era of radical transformation. - Catherine Kellogg, University of Alberta

The essays in this volume are insightful and extraordinary experiences in understanding plasticity and a variety of issues, like epigenesis, materiality, eroticism, semiosis, neuroliterature and others that hold themselves in its seductive spectrum. - Ranjan Ghosh, University of North Bengal

New interdisciplinary essays on key topics in mimetic studies, including three contributions by internationally renowned philosopher Catherine Malabou

This is the third volume of a trilogy on Homo Mimeticus, yet in no way does it seek to bring mimetic studies to an end. On the contrary, the ambition of this book is to further the mimetic turn via a new beginning. In collaboration with the French philosopher Catherine Malabou, international contributors argue that plasticity—understood in its double capacity to receive form and to give form—plays a transformative role in the many lives of homo mimeticus qua homo plasticus. Ranging from philosophy to literature, sociology to semiology, the plastic arts to neurobiology, and addressing subjects as diverse as epigenetic mimesis and neuroliterature, plastic figures and the mimetic subconscious, Homo Mimeticus III shows that both new materialisms and mimetic studies are central to affirming plastic metamorphoses in the twenty-first century.

In collaboration with Catherine Malabou

Nidesh Lawtoo is a philosopher and cultural critic, professor of Modern European Literature and Culture at Leiden University.

Willow Verkerk is lecturer in Continental Philosophy and Social Philosophy at the University of British Columbia.

Homo Mimeticus III is a major contribution to contemporary thought. Through elegant argumentation, intellectual range, and remarkable conceptual inventiveness, the volume reanimates and redefines the relation between mimesis and plasticity for an era of radical transformation. - Catherine Kellogg, University of Alberta

The essays in this volume are insightful and extraordinary experiences in understanding plasticity and a variety of issues, like epigenesis, materiality, eroticism, semiosis, neuroliterature and others that hold themselves in its seductive spectrum. - Ranjan Ghosh, University of North Bengal