The Non-Human as Such

On Men, Animals, and Barbers

  • Oxana Timofeeva European University in St. Petersburg, Russia
Keywords: non-human, the nonhuman, animal, negation, general equivalent, Žižek, Derrida

Abstract

The article investigates a dialectic that, through the work of negation, paradoxically brings the non-human as ‘anything but human’ back to the human. It shows how and why, throughout the criticism of all forms of anthropocentrism, the human being still occupies a central place in the very discourse that negates him. His principal position only changed its value from а positive to а negative one. If there is something in common among all possible non-human things in the world, it is their negative determination with regards to the human. While being actively denied, ‘human’ thus remains a main constitutive element of their identity, a kind of general equivalent, whose ontological status is highly problematic and therefore particularly interesting.

Author Biography

Oxana Timofeeva, European University in St. Petersburg, Russia

Oxana Timofeeva is a senior lecturer on Contemporary Philosophy at the European University in St. Petersburg, a senior research fellow at the Institute of Philosophy of the Russian Academy of Science (Moscow), a member of the artistic collective “Chto Delat?” (“What is to be done?”), a deputy editor of the journal Stasis, and the author of History of Animals: An Essay on Negativity, Immanence, and Freedom (Maastricht, 2009) and Introduction to the Erotic Philosophy of Georges Bataille (in Russian, Moscow, 2009).

Published
2016-11-30
Section
_Articles