ABSTRACT

The world is an interdependent whole of which everything is an integral, complexly related, part. Yet current ways of thinking, and being, persistently separate social phenomena and the individual self from the multiple dimensions with which they are interconnected. The Integral Nature of Things examines this revealing paradox and its consequences in a variety of sites: everyday language, labour, advertising, technology, post-structuralist theory, political rhetoric, urban planning, sex, neoliberal globalisation. Mani demonstrates how even though the interrelations between things are obscured by the ruling paradigm, the facts of relationality and indivisibility continually assert themselves. The book interweaves prose with poetry and sociocultural analysis with observational accounts to offer an alternative framework for addressing aspects of the cognitive, cultural, political, and ethical crisis we face today.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction: One Day at Noon

chapter |9 pages

The Aesthetics of Display

chapter |4 pages

The Grass Cutter

chapter |21 pages

Avenue Road Suite

chapter |10 pages

It Leaves You Wanting More

chapter |3 pages

Intimacy

chapter |3 pages

Root Vibration

chapter |7 pages

Beyond Antithesis

chapter |1 pages

For Althusser with Love

chapter |8 pages

Reconjugating Law and Dharma

chapter |8 pages

Sex

chapter |1 pages

The Morning Light

chapter |9 pages

Witnessing

chapter |10 pages

On Repetition

chapter |8 pages

Toward Digital Dispassion

chapter |8 pages

Cognition and Devotion

chapter |1 pages

Like The Wind

chapter |8 pages

Interdependence

chapter |1 pages

Reciprocal Flows

chapter |12 pages

The Tree and I

chapter |2 pages

Azan

chapter |12 pages

Returning to Our Senses

chapter |8 pages

Once Upon a Time in the Present

chapter |1 pages

On Days Like This

chapter |7 pages

Afterword