Abstract
(Selection) In her provocative introduction to the interdisciplinary collection Extinction,
Claire Colebrook diagnoses posthumanism as “delusional,” “symptomatic,”
and “psychotic.” Now that we live in what geologists informally
call the “anthropocene” – a new epoch in which a preponderance of the
earth’s systems are irreversibly altered by human activity – she claims that
it is dangerous, insane even, to imagine that the traditional, “Cartesian”
idea of man as master of nature is invalid. The declaration of the death
of man betrays a willful denial of humanity’s destructive capacity. The
dream that man is disappearing like a “face drawn in the sand at the edge
of the sea” is a symptom of a psychosis that protects us from the truth of
man’s irretrievable imprint: eroding coral reefs, melting glaciers, gaping
ozone, thousands of extinct species, and so much more. Colebrook’s is
not only an indictment of French post-structuralism. She issues no less
a challenge to feminist posthumanisms, which have launched influential
assaults against the Cartesian figure of the self-possessed subject (who,
we must admit, has few defenders in Continental philosophy generally).
Does the heralding of the anthropocene demand a critical revival of Cartesian
humanism? Must we affirm that humans are exceptional after all?