Signes de vie : Affect, langage et (extra)humanité

Auteurs-es

  • Adrian Downey Mount Saint Vincent University
  • Gonen Sagy Chercheur indépendant

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40689

Mots-clés :

théorie de l'affect, nécropolitique, enquête poétique, posthumanisme

Résumé

Fragmenté et visant la provocation plutôt que l'élucidation, cet article présente des extraits de la conversation en cours entre deux chercheurs en éducation. Les auteurs établissent leur conversation comme une réponse aux tensions soulevées par Monica Prendergast entre les discours du tournant ontologique et le champ de recherche poétique d'origine humaniste. En s'engageant dans le posthumanisme, le tournant affectif, le refus autochtone et les écrits d'Achille Mbembe sur la nécropolitique, les auteurs suggèrent des voies prometteuses de changement pour l'enquête poétique étant donné la nature tumultueuse de notre époque. Ils concluent en suggérant que la résistance par le langage peut être une composante nécessaire pour rester humain dans ces temps de chaos.

Bibliographies de l'auteur-e

Adrian Downey, Mount Saint Vincent University

Adrian Downey is an assistant professor at Mount Saint Vincent University.

Gonen Sagy, Chercheur indépendant

Gonen Sagy is a thinker, poet and scholar, currently living and working in Canada.

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Publié-e

2022-06-27

Comment citer

Downey, A., & Sagy, G. (2022). Signes de vie : Affect, langage et (extra)humanité . La Revue De l’association Canadienne Pour l’étude De Curriculum , 19(2), 29–49. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40689