Formats
Anthologies
105
Audio
310
Catalogues
410
Clothing
23
Editions
31
Ephemera
68
Literary
39
Monographs
179
Posters
298
Video
39
Zines
142

Shop > Artists' Books

Out of Stock
#04860

The Prince and the Wolf: Latour and Harman at the LSE

Date
2010
Publisher
Zero Books
Format
Artists' Books
Details
Softcover
ISBN
978-1-84694-422-2
Size
14 × 21 × 1 cm
Length
145 
Description

The Prince and the Wolf contains the transcript of a debate which took place on 5th February 2008 at the London School of Economics (LSE) between the prominent French sociologist, anthropologist, and philosopher Bruno Latour and the Cairo-based American philosopher Graham Harman. The occasion for the debate was the impending publication of Harman’s book, Prince of Networks: Bruno Latour and Metaphysics.

During the discussion, Latour (the ‘Prince’) compared the professional philosophers who have pursued him over the years to a pack of wolves. The Prince and the Wolf is the story of what happens when the wolf catches up with the prince. Latour and Harman engage in brisk and witty conversation about questions that go to the heart of both metaphysics and research methodology: What are objects? How do they interact? And best how to study them?


DACN
  1. The Prince and the Wolf: Latour and Harman at the LSE
 

Related Items

  1. Richard Prince: Lynn Valley
  2. Wolf Vostell: Great Bear Pamphlet - Berlin and Phenomena
  3. Eric Doeringer: 60 Years Later, Coming Through The Rye
  4. TRA Edge of Becoming
  5. Sarah Browne: How to Use Fool’s Gold
  6. Nihilist Spasm Band and Sonic Youth: Wintage Records Subscription Service
  7. Erik van der Weijde: Foto.Zine Nr.4 #1-5
  8. Eric Doeringer: The Rematerialization Of The Art Object
  9. Journal d’Echo
  10. Michael Eddy: Credos IV
  11. Lars Ahlstrom and Hans Anders Molin: Airspace
  12. David Askevold and Christina Ritchie: Activating the Archive 4: Double Agent
  13. Colin Campbell and Bruce ed. Ferguson: Activating the Archive 2: Otherwise Worldly
  14. Greg Curnoe: Blue Book no. 8
  15. Emily Vey Duke: I’d Rather be Polymorphous Perverse
  16. Robert Fones: Field Identification