Politics of Negativity

How is it possible to say ‘no’ – to contradict, oppose, reject or deny something? Philosophy of the last two centuries draws attention to the paradox of negation, which cannot help but reaffirm what it pretends rejecting. Nevertheless, at least since Hegel, ‘negativity’ became an essential ingredien...

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Other Authors: Artemy Magun, Oxana Timofeeva, Sami Khatib, Daniel Colucciello Barber, Gregor Moder
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.25620/e140117
https://www.ici-berlin.org/events/politics-of-negativity/
https://oa.ici-berlin.org/doi/10.25620/e140117
https://oa.ici-berlin.org/files/original/10.25620_e140117/Events_15870_600x450.jpg
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spelling fticiberlin:oai:ici-berlin.org:3767 2024-09-15T18:33:32+00:00 Politics of Negativity Artemy Magun Oxana Timofeeva Sami Khatib Daniel Colucciello Barber Gregor Moder 2014-01-17 mp4 PT2H14M2S https://doi.org/10.25620/e140117 https://www.ici-berlin.org/events/politics-of-negativity/ https://oa.ici-berlin.org/doi/10.25620/e140117 https://oa.ici-berlin.org/files/original/10.25620_e140117/Events_15870_600x450.jpg English eng https://doi.org/10.25620/e140117 https://www.ici-berlin.org/events/politics-of-negativity/ Discussion dctype:Event 2014 fticiberlin https://doi.org/10.25620/e140117 2024-07-17T03:01:45Z How is it possible to say ‘no’ – to contradict, oppose, reject or deny something? Philosophy of the last two centuries draws attention to the paradox of negation, which cannot help but reaffirm what it pretends rejecting. Nevertheless, at least since Hegel, ‘negativity’ became an essential ingredient of modernity to the point that all major concepts of modern thought – such as subjectivity, freedom, and revolution – seem to necessarily imply a positive evaluation of the negative. 20th century philosophy may also be read as a desperate search for absolute negativity, one that would not have anything positive in it and would therefore represent a pure act of disjuncture. However, such an absolutely negative attitude displays a troubling melancholic side too: instead of negating something, the epoch of negativity may end up simply ‘willing nothing’. What happens then when negativity goes awry? The first issue of Stasis reflects on the possibility of rehabilitating the virtues of the negative as an antidote to resist political melancholia and turn it into new revolutionary theories and practices. Stasis is a peer-reviewed bilingual journal (English/Russian) in social and political theory, which is published by the European University at St. Petersburg. Stasis means at once a particular position, an interrupting suspension, and an uprising. The first issue includes articles by Ray Brassier, Sami Khatib, Vitaly Kosykhin, Artemy Magun, Jamila Mascat, Gregor Moder, Benjamin Noys, and Oxana Timofeeva. Other/Unknown Material sami ICI Berlin Repository
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description How is it possible to say ‘no’ – to contradict, oppose, reject or deny something? Philosophy of the last two centuries draws attention to the paradox of negation, which cannot help but reaffirm what it pretends rejecting. Nevertheless, at least since Hegel, ‘negativity’ became an essential ingredient of modernity to the point that all major concepts of modern thought – such as subjectivity, freedom, and revolution – seem to necessarily imply a positive evaluation of the negative. 20th century philosophy may also be read as a desperate search for absolute negativity, one that would not have anything positive in it and would therefore represent a pure act of disjuncture. However, such an absolutely negative attitude displays a troubling melancholic side too: instead of negating something, the epoch of negativity may end up simply ‘willing nothing’. What happens then when negativity goes awry? The first issue of Stasis reflects on the possibility of rehabilitating the virtues of the negative as an antidote to resist political melancholia and turn it into new revolutionary theories and practices. Stasis is a peer-reviewed bilingual journal (English/Russian) in social and political theory, which is published by the European University at St. Petersburg. Stasis means at once a particular position, an interrupting suspension, and an uprising. The first issue includes articles by Ray Brassier, Sami Khatib, Vitaly Kosykhin, Artemy Magun, Jamila Mascat, Gregor Moder, Benjamin Noys, and Oxana Timofeeva.
author2 Artemy Magun
Oxana Timofeeva
Sami Khatib
Daniel Colucciello Barber
Gregor Moder
format Other/Unknown Material
title Politics of Negativity
spellingShingle Politics of Negativity
title_short Politics of Negativity
title_full Politics of Negativity
title_fullStr Politics of Negativity
title_full_unstemmed Politics of Negativity
title_sort politics of negativity
publishDate 2014
url https://doi.org/10.25620/e140117
https://www.ici-berlin.org/events/politics-of-negativity/
https://oa.ici-berlin.org/doi/10.25620/e140117
https://oa.ici-berlin.org/files/original/10.25620_e140117/Events_15870_600x450.jpg
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_relation https://doi.org/10.25620/e140117
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