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Culture Industry Redux: Stiegler and Derrida on Technics and Cultural Politics

Abstract

This essay seeks to further the critical reception of Stiegler’s philosophy of technology by situating his work within the legacy of critical theory (broadly understood) and deconstruction (broadly understood). Drawing on what Richard Beardsworth has described as Stiegler’s ‘Left-Derrideanism’-his radical re-thinking of the problem of technics and related call for a “politics of memory”-I argue that Stiegler’s transformation of both Heidegger and Derrida retrieves and renews the interrupted Frankfurt school tradition of culture industry critique. What we might call Stiegler’s ‘deconstructive materialism’ reinvigorates the project of a cultural politics that would take place in the intersection between culture, technics, and politics in the more conventional sense. In this respect, Stiegler’s culture industry redux points to a number of important practical cultural responses to the debilitating malaise that increasingly afflicts politics in liberal capitalist democracies. I conclude by suggesting what such a Stieglerian ‘cultural politics of memory’ might entail.

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Author Biography

Robert Sinnerbrink

Robert Sinnerbrink is Lecturer in Philosophy at Macquarie University, Sydney. He is the author of Understanding Hegelianism (Acumen, 2007), co-editor of Critique Today (Brill, 2006), and has published numerous articles on critical theory, social philosophy, European philosophy, aesthetics, and philosophy of film.