Eugene Thacker
Author of In The Dust of This Planet
About the Author
Eugene Thacker is the author of several books, including In The Dust of This Planet. He teaches at The New School in New York City.
Series
Works by Eugene Thacker
Drawn and Quartered 1 copy
Associated Works
First Person: New Media as Story, Performance, and Game (2004) — Contributor — 170 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1971-04-06
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Education
- Rutgers University (PhD - Comparative Literature)
University of Washington, Seattle - Occupations
- professor (Media Studies)
philosopher
poet
author - Organizations
- New School for Social Research
Members
Reviews
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 17
- Also by
- 6
- Members
- 920
- Popularity
- #27,887
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 12
- ISBNs
- 37
- Languages
- 2
- Favorited
- 1
This neat taxonomy, with obvious relevance to environmental destruction, returns near the end of the book in a commentary on Georges Bataille’s 'The Congested Planet':
This taxonomic discussion was to me the centre of the book, although it was woven in with a great deal about mysticism, theology, and ooze that I saw more as intellectual curiosities. When it comes to environmental philosophy, I find myself preferring the more focused approach of, for example, Timothy Morton’s [b:The Ecological Thought|7722063|The Ecological Thought|Timothy Morton|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348985833s/7722063.jpg|10474582].
I was a little disappointed by Thacker’s discussion of Dante’s [b:Inferno|15645|Inferno (The Divine Comedy #1)|Dante Alighieri|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1520255019s/15645.jpg|2377563], in part because I didn’t agree with his interpretation of, “What I was once, alive, I still am, dead!” Still, it was nice to realise that I actually have opinions about the [b:Inferno|15645|Inferno (The Divine Comedy #1)|Dante Alighieri|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1520255019s/15645.jpg|2377563], something of which I was not previously aware. One reference I was delighted to see pop up was Shiel’s [b:The Purple Cloud|209525|The Purple Cloud (Frontiers of Imagination)|M.P. Shiel|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1328817985s/209525.jpg|923941], an extraordinary apocalyptic novel from 1901 that I read earlier this year. Now that Thacker does do justice to, comparing it with Hoyle’s [b:The Black Cloud|1246118|The Black Cloud|Fred Hoyle|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1457534017s/1246118.jpg|1398552] (a book I regularly see in the library but do not borrow because it seems similar to so many others) and J. G Ballard’s first novel [b:The Wind from Nowhere|262359|The Wind from Nowhere|J.G. Ballard|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1330051830s/262359.jpg|254310] (which I haven’t read either, but certainly sounds like J.G. Ballard’s first novel ought to). What links the three is apparently mist; I liked the comparison of Shiel’s slightly demented mysticism with Hoyle’s scientific rationalism and Ballard’s ambiguity.
Moreover, I smiled at the commentary on Roland Emmerich disaster movies. I’m not a great horror fan, but I’ve seen all of Emmerich’s stupid global catastrophe blockbusters multiple times. Something in me loves the morbid spectacle of civilisation collapsing dramatically. Thacker notes that the threat to civilisation evolves from alien invasion (Independence Day, 1996), to anthropogenic climate change (The Day After Tomorrow, 2004 - my personal favourite), to arbitrary heating up of Earth’s core (2012, 2009), so from external to internal to incomprehensible. I agree with Thacker that these films exhibit ‘implicitly or explicitly, eschatological themes’.
Perhaps my favourite comment in the whole book, though, is as follows:
Although I’m not sure how to interpret ‘provenance’ in that sentence, I need hardly explain why I enjoyed it. What social class would werewolves allegorise? The peasantry? There was certainly fun to be found in this book, but it was more interested in themes of horror in the past than the ‘unthinkable world’ of today. At the very end, Thacker admits that his conclusion, about the need to think through nihilism to the other side, to the ‘emptiness beyond the empty’, is not helpful. This is a rather frustrating note to conclude on, despite the interest and amusement to be found in the rest of the book.… (more)