人类之后的见证

IF 0.2 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Michael Richardson, Magdalena Zolkos
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引用次数: 4

摘要

什么是人类之后的见证?状语从句首先暗示了与主体的时间和条件关系,由此,目击的行为或事件跟随,回应,并以人类的离开或崩溃为条件。当然,这并不是说,从后人文主义的角度来看,证词发生在一个没有人类的世界里。改写Dipesh Chakrabarty对Alan Weisman的书《没有我们的世界》的陈述,我们或许可以认为,想象“在一个没有人类的世界里”的见证总是意味着“超越历史敏感性的把握”(Chakrabarty 197)。正如这里收集的文章所表明的那样,人类并没有从目击的场景中被“清除”(参见德里达的“吃得好”),而是体现了各种各样的伪装、位置和方向的人类,尽管总是与非人类或非人类的同伴接近,但却充斥着这一期的页面。这将见证和证词的问题置于晚期现代性“自然世界和人类与非人类关系的深刻变化”(Fenske和Norkunas 105)的更广泛的背景下,在当代见证理论和分析中,人类主体令人不安、分散和困扰(参见,例如,Chua;Gillespie;Lummaa;奥利弗,《见证,承认》;理查森,“人类世”;Tuana)。那么,“在人之后”的第一种意义,就意味着把“人”作为证言的主体和客体的不可简化的复杂性。这与雪莉·文特(sheryl Vint)对“人类之后”(after the human)这一短语的阐述是一致的,这一短语既对“西方思想的歧视性系统”在历史上将谁和什么排除在人类定义之外提出了问题,也表明以人为中心的白话在理论和分析上的局限性在于它试图将人类表述为一个“固定的概念”(1-2)。从这个角度来看,见证理论中的“人”不再是唯一的代理人、作者和见证的建筑师,他展示了不容置疑的历史代理能力,并对“非人类”(物体、环境、植物、动物等)施加了形成性的影响,这些“非人类”因此被赋予了道具和角色
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
WITNESSING AFTER THE HUMAN
W hat does it mean to witness after the human? The adverbial clause suggests, first, a temporal and a conditional relation to the subject, whereby the act or event of witnessing follows, responds to, and is conditioned by the departure, or the crumbling away of, the human. This is not to say, of course, that testimony viewed from a post-humanist perspective takes place in a world devoid of humans. Paraphrasing Dipesh Chakrabarty’s statement on Alan Weisman’s book The World Without Us, we could perhaps suggest that imagining witnessing “in a world without humans” would invariably mean situating testimony “beyond the grasp of historical sensibility” (Chakrabarty 197). As the contributions collected here evince, rather than being “liquidated” from the scene of witnessing (cf. Derrida, “Eating Well”), the human – embodying a variety of guises, positions, and orientations – pullulates the pages of this issue, though always in proximity to non-human or other-than-human companions. This situates the question of witnessing and testimony in the broader context of late modernity’s “profound changes in the natural world and in human–nonhuman relations” (Fenske and Norkunas 105), with the effect of unsettling, decentring, and troubling the human subject in contemporary testimonial theory and analysis (see, e.g., Chua; Gillespie; Lummaa; Oliver, “Witnessing, Recognition”; Richardson, “Anthropocene”; Tuana). The first sense of “after the human,” then, implies the irreducible complication of taking the “human” as a subject and an object of testimony. This is consistent with Sherryl Vint’s elaboration of the phrase “after the human,” which both problematizes who and what has been historically excluded from the definition of the human by “discriminatory systems of western thought” and suggests that the theoretical and analytical limitations of human-centric vernacular lie in its ambition to articulate human as a “fixed concept” (1–2). From this perspective, the “human” in testimonial theory is no longer the sole agent, author, and architect of witnessing, who displays unquestioned capacity for historical agency and exerts formative influence on “non-humans” (objects, environments, plants, animals, etc.) that have been consequently assigned the role of props and
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来源期刊
ANGELAKI-JOURNAL OF THE THEORETICAL HUMANITIES
ANGELAKI-JOURNAL OF THE THEORETICAL HUMANITIES HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
33.30%
发文量
57
期刊介绍: Angelaki: journal of the theoretical humanities was established in September 1993 to provide an international forum for vanguard work in the theoretical humanities. In itself a contentious category, "theoretical humanities" represents the productive nexus of work in the disciplinary fields of literary criticism and theory, philosophy, and cultural studies. The journal is dedicated to the refreshing of intellectual coordinates, and to the challenging and vivifying process of re-thinking. Angelaki: journal of the theoretical humanities encourages a critical engagement with theory in terms of disciplinary development and intellectual and political usefulness, the inquiry into and articulation of culture.
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