While drawing extensively on the work of contemporary theorists, Simon Glezos recognizes that social acceleration is not a purely recent phenomenon. He therefore turns to thinkers such as Nietzsche, Spinoza, Bergson, and Merleau-Ponty, to ask how they sought to understand, and respond to, the rapid changes and unsettling temporalities of their eras, and how their insights can be applied to our own.
Advancing theoretical understanding and offering a useful way to analytically conceptualize the nature of time, Speed and Micropolitics will be of interest to students and scholars studying affect theory, theories of the body, new materialism, phenomenology, as well as the history of political thought.
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"Even locked in our houses with nowhere to go we are beset by the need for speed. Bandwidth for telecommuting, wait estimates for grocery and toilet paper deliveries, guarantees of vaccines in unprecedented time, all promises or disappointments of a faster future. In this moment of anxious temporality Simon Glezos offers us a phenomenology of speed at the scale of the body rather than the supply chain or the fiber wire. Against the technical questions of fast and slow, Glezos redirects us to our experience of embodied, radically unsettled perceptive interchanges-feelings of speed. For Glezos this is the pressing philosophical provocation of our contemporary moment. Speed and Micropolitics is a gorgeous adventure following speed's trail through the thinking of Spinoza, Henri Bergson, Wendy Brown and Maurice Merleau-Ponty among many others. In each supple reading we find openings for meaningful reflection and even the possibility of ethical encounters amidst the hemorrhaging resentment of our accelerating times." - Jarius Grove, Associate Professor of International Relations, The University of Hawai'i at Manoa








