IMPOSSIBILITY OF THAT

Eva Hayward, Che Gossett

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Working with Jorge Luis Borges’s The Book of Imaginary Beings, this essay shows how creaturely beings, or transfigurations, dramatize the afterlife of racial slavery, coloniality, the (con)temporality of HIV/AIDS, and how their im/possibility disturbs and breaks with the “order of things.” While transitive and transversal in their potentiality for insurgency, Imaginary Beings and Fantastic Zoology also always carry a colonial logic, a conquest paradigm, while also un-resting (if not necessarily liberating) the enjoyment of, what Borges calls, “terrible grounds.” Taking up fantastical and imaginary figures, this essay aims to add to Borges’s compendium of beings; this is a tracing of fugitive forces, of pessimistic and potent provocations that break from “the Human,” “the Man,” and their enumerable agents–from the Fanonian invocation of the bestiary, to the +* value form and its racialized and erotico-, bio-, and necropolitical calculus of HIV/AIDS risk, the authors explore transfigurations at the edge of existence.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)15-24
Number of pages10
JournalAngelaki - Journal of the Theoretical Humanities
Volume22
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 3 2017

Keywords

  • colonialism
  • necropolitics
  • race
  • transfiguration

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cultural Studies
  • Philosophy
  • Literature and Literary Theory

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'IMPOSSIBILITY OF THAT'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this