Meandering 1: In lieu of a Preface
Introduction: By way of Getting Started
Meandering 2: Land Acknowledgement
Chapter 1: The Transjective-A Posthumanist Material Feminist Ontology
Meandering 3: Charlie and Me
Chapter 2: Our Polyp-Being
Meandering 4: Feeling/Being Out of Place
Chapter 3: Affective Fabric and Collective Agency
Meandering 5: Inoculation
Chapter 4: Of Selves and Agents
Meandering 6: Inosculation
Meandering 7: 4am By the Train Tracks
Chapter 5: Vulnerability
Meandering 8: World in Turmoil
Chapter 6: Manifold Toxicity
Meandering 9: Cohabitating
Chapter 7: Ethical Thriving
References
Christine Daigle is Professor of Philosophy and Director, Posthumanism Research Institute at Brock University, Canada. She is the editor of the series Posthuman Practice (Bloomsbury).
A timely dethroning of the human subject and embracing of a new kind of existence, in this book Christine Daigle highlights the affirmative potential of vulnerability amidst unprecedented times of more-than-human crises. By bringing together traditions as diverse as feminist materialist philosophy, phenomenology, and affect theory, Daigle convincingly pleas for the radical embracing of a shared posthumanist vulnerability.
Posthuman Vulnerability fills a significant theoretical gap - whilst feminism has explored the affirming power of vulnerability, it's been from a very human-centric viewpoint. In posing a feminist and posthuman take on vulnerability, Daigle is bridging traditions in a totally original and much needed way.