Post Conferences Post

I just got back from RSA and Computers and Writing–two great weekends that left me both socially and professionally refreshed. I’m working today towards advancing both papers (one on social media, ethics, and Rowan’s cancer, the other on Latour, sophistry, and Levinas) toward publication. With that in mind, here’s my summer reading list:

  • Lingis, Alphonso. The Community of Those Who Have Nothing in Common. I read this one on my plane rides, but lost it. Argh. Given how much I write in my books, this was a painful loss.
  • Levinas, Emmanuel. Ethics and Infinity. Conversations with Philippe Nemo. I love Levinas’s candor in interviews, so I am looking forward to this collection.
  • Levinas, Emmanuel. Humanism and the Other. I read this one for my diss, but want to return to it as I prepare to transform the diss into a book proposal. So much of the great work I saw this weekend at RSA uses Heidegger, Latour, and Harman to advance a rhetoric of the non-human. I want to revisit Levinas’s challenge to the Human more intimately–because I feel the Heidegger-Latour-Harman work risks repeating what Levinas’s ethics so desperately opposed–liquidating humans in our search for The [non]Human. (and, yeah, that line will probably appear in an article soon…)
  • Levinas, Emmanuel. Entre-Nous. Why stop at two Levinas?
  • Harman, Graham. Prince of Networks: Bruno Latour and Metaphysics (Anamnesis). As I said above, Harman was a significant node in my RSA network this year. This book explicitly picks up an argument for a metaphysical rhetoric. Harman’s other books look great too, but I have to start somewhere, and I don’t have time to read all three (I would also like to read Tool-Being and Guerilla Metaphysics, but those two will have to wait).
  • Brooke, Collin Gifford. Lingua Fracta: Toward a Rhetoric of New Media.. Collin won the C&W best book award, and I think I am going to teach it in my Contemporary Rhetoircs course this fall (I want to read it first to see how much it draws upon postmodern theory–my hope is that it draws upon and advances us beyond pomo while formulating praxis for digital environments).
  • Kristeva, Julia. Strangers to Ourselves. Two talented graduate students included this one in their independent studies with me (one on rhetoric’s relation to post-coloniality, the other on a rhetoric of abjection). I recommended the book without having read it. Time to read it.

In addition to these seven, I’ll be teaching Gregory Ulmer’s Internet Invention for the first time. I’m reading through it now, and beginning to construct my first MyStory. I contacted Ulmer about the work (looking for some examples, which he readily supplied!), and he strongly advised that I construct a MyStory before I begin trying to teach them. I had already planned to do this, hopefully I can post an update regarding my progress soon.

Happy summer reading all!

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