ABSTRACT

This book provides a theoretical framework for understanding the micropolitics of speed; a rich, nuanced, and embodied account of life in an accelerating world. What does it feel like to live in an era of profound social acceleration? What kinds of affects, perceptions, and identities does an accelerating world produce? The answers to these questions mean more than simply understanding the psychology of speed; they also mean understanding issues in contemporary politics as diverse as xenophobia and anti-immigration policies, patterns of transnational identification and solidarity, social isolation and alienation, and the ability of new media to coordinate social movements.

While drawing extensively on the work of contemporary theorists, Simon Glezos recognizes that social acceleration is not a purely recent phenomenon. He therefore turns to thinkers such as Nietzsche, Spinoza, Bergson, and Merleau-Ponty, to ask how they sought to understand, and respond to, the rapid changes and unsettling temporalities of their eras, and how their insights can be applied to our own.

Advancing theoretical understanding and offering a useful way to analytically conceptualize the nature of time, Speed and Micropolitics will be of interest to students and scholars studying affect theory, theories of the body, new materialism, phenomenology, as well as the history of political thought.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Beyond Fast and Slow

part I|92 pages

Speed and Affect

chapter 1|25 pages

Brown’s Paradox

Speed, Ressentiment, and Global Politics

chapter 2|35 pages

“No One Has Yet Learned How Fast the Body can Go”

Spinoza, Speed, and the Body 1

chapter 3|30 pages

Doing Well and Being Glad

Spinoza and the Roots of Reactionary Politics

part II|141 pages

Speed and Perception

chapter 4|18 pages

Despisers of the Posthuman Body

Speed, Perception, and Disembodiment

chapter 5|52 pages

Embodied Virtuality

Speed, Perception, and New Media in Bergson

chapter 6|34 pages

In the Flesh of an Accelerating World

Merleau-Ponty, Technology, and the Encounter With the Other

chapter 7|35 pages

Towards a Phenomenology of Speed

Merleau-Ponty and Spatiality in an Accelerating World