02 Inhuman Symposium – Rosi Braidotti
Rosi Braidotti: Posthuman, All Too Human? A Cultural Political Cartography Symposium Inhuman 25.05.15, 11.00 – 19.30 Participants: Helen Hester, Rosi Braidotti, Johannes Paul Raether / Transformella, Reza Negarestani, Peter Wolfendale, François Laruelle Technological advances, socioeconomic change, and new insights in neurology compel us to reassess our concept of human nature. The “Inhuman” symposium brings together a number of philosophical positions that question the basic assumptions of humanism. It presents current perspectives on human subjectivity and the body that do not rely on the figure of man, transcend biological and social determinations of gender and conceive the self as inherently and permanently mutable. Within this context, fundamental doubts arise regarding the primacy of the human being, and we recognize the need to reflect upon matter independent of the human being and develop a new materialism. Moderation: Anna Sailer

Rosi Braidotti "Intelligence, Affirmative Ethics and the Anti-fascist Life" DGS24, TU Delft

05 Inhuman Symposium – Peter Wolfendale

Why do people see elves when they take DMT? | Rupert Sheldrake

Rosi Braidotti: What is the Human in the Humanities Today?

04 Inhuman Symposium – Reza Negarestani

Rosi Braidotti en el CCCB

Rosi Braidotti – Necropolitics and Ways of Dying

Karen Barad: Troubling Time/s, Undoing the Future

01 Inhuman Symposium – Helen Hester

Rosi Braidotti: “The concept of human has always been associated with relations of power”

Dictionary of Now #12 | Rosi Braidotti: Post-Humanimals

Posthuman Feminism Book Launch with Rosi Braidotti

Donna Haraway: "From Cyborgs to Companion Species"

Artistry and Agency in a World of Vibrant Matter | The New School

Rosi Braidotti, “Posthuman Knowledge”

Karen Barad: On Touching the Stranger Within – The Alterity that Therefore I Am

Panel debate with Rosi Braidotti in the Futures Lecture Series

6 Symposium: Speculations on Anonymous Materials - Reza Negarestani

Rosi Braidotti, “Memoirs of a Posthumanist“

