'A delightful, informative read for Latour novices and experts alike'
- Ian Bogost, Ivan Allen College Distinguished Chair in Media Studies and author of Alien Phenomenology, or What it’s Like to Be a Thing,
'With refreshing creativity, Graham Harman extracts his political project from Bruno Latour's philosophical writings. His book lucidly maps out the course that Latour's thought charts across left and right - truth and power - not because this opposition doesn't matter, but because for all their practical urgency, today's crises also present a great intellectual challenge, requiring a redefinition of the very objectives of politics'
- Noortje Marres,
Along with Latour's most important articles on political themes, the book chooses three works as exemplary of the distinct periods in Latour's thinking: The Pasteurization of France, Politics of Nature, and the recently published An Inquiry Into Modes of Existence, as his conception of politics evolves from a global power struggle between individuals, to the fabrication of fragile parliamentary networks, to just one mode of existence among many others.
A Note on the Life and Thought of Bruno Latour
Introduction: Truth Politics and Power Politics
1. In Search of a Latourian Political Philosophy
2. Early Latour: A Hannibal of Actants
3. Middle Latour: The Parliament of Things
4. Late Latour: Politics as a Mode
5. 'Usefully Pilloried': Latour’s Left Flank
6. 'An Interesting Reactionary': Latour’s Right Flank
7. 'A Copernican Revolution': Lippmann, Dewey and Object-Oriented Politics
8. Concluding Remarks
Notes
Bibliography
Index