The Stupid Nineteenth Century: Philosophy of History in Critical Posthumanist and Post-anthropocentric Thought
Barrell, Callum Jack Arthur and Raimondi, Sara (2024) The Stupid Nineteenth Century: Philosophy of History in Critical Posthumanist and Post-anthropocentric Thought. History and Theory. (In Press)
Abstract
This article addresses the charge of “stupidity” leveled at nineteenth-century thought by recent critical posthumanist and post-anthropocentric theorists. Section one traces a particularistic reading of nineteenth-century philosophy of history in the writings of Rosi Braidotti and Bruno Latour, both of whom employ the nineteenth century as an intellectual shorthand for human exceptionalism and its implicit collusion with the present ecological crisis. Their respective posthumanist and post-anthropocentric provocations (1) question the composition, agency, and exceptionalism of the human, and (2) posit multiple temporalities as an alternative to the linear time of universal history. While intellectual historians have begun to complicate the first provocation in relation to the nineteenth century, we lack an equivalent intervention for the second. In response, section two draws on John Stuart Mill’s (1806–1873) reception of Auguste Comte (1798–1857) to demonstrate that speculative philosophy of history in fact grappled with its own problems of scale, multiplicity, and direction. We show that Mill, partly in response to Comte, employed incommensurable historical registers, such as the universal and the relative, to interpret the past at different scales of analysis. These scales were undeniably human, not to mention Eurocentric, but they nevertheless invite a more nuanced reading of the nineteenth century, as well as a less linear and troubled logic of overcoming that afflicts Braidotti, Latour, and others. In this spirit, the final section suggests that nineteenth-century philosophy of history may actually facilitate the re-composition of the human in time, a task that is central to the multifaceted crisis of the present posthumanist, post-anthropocentric, and Anthropocenic conjuncture.
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