Table of Contents:
  • Machine generated contents note: Bodies of water (a genealogy of a figuration)
  • Posthuman feminism for the Anthropocene
  • Living with the problem
  • Water is what we make it
  • The possibility of posthuman phenomenology
  • 1. Embodying Water: Feminist Phenomenology for Posthuman Worlds
  • A posthuman politics of location
  • Milky ways: Tracing posthuman feminisms
  • How to think (about) a body of water: Posthuman phenomenology between Merleau-Ponty and Deleuze
  • How to think (as) a body of water: Access, amplify, describe!
  • Posthuman ties in a too-human world
  • 2. Posthuman Gestationality: Luce Irigaray and Water's Queer Repetitions
  • Hydrological cycles
  • Elemental bodies: Irigaray as posthuman phenomenologist?
  • Love letters to watery others: Marine Lover of Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Gestationality as (sexuate) difference and repetition
  • The onto-logic of amniotics (queering waters repetitions)
  • Bodies of water beyond humanism
  • 3. Fishy Beginnings
  • Other evolutions
  • Dissolving origin stories
  • Carrier bags and Hypersea
  • Wet sex
  • Waters remembered (moving below the surface)
  • Unknowability as planetarity (or, becoming the water that we cannot become)
  • Aspiration, that oceanic feeling
  • 4. Imagining Water in the Anthropocene
  • Prologue/Kwe
  • Swimming into the Anthropocene
  • Learning from anticolonial waters
  • Water is life? Commodity, charity and other repetitions
  • Material imaginaries and other aqueous questions.