Katerina Kolozova

Institute of Social Sciences and Humanities
Vienna University of Technology
  •  12
    Departing from the conventional readings of Karl Marx's Capital and other of his works, by way of François Laruelle's "radicalization of concepts," Katerina Kolozova identifies a theoretical kernel in Marx's thought whose critical and interpretative force can be employed without reference to its subsequent interpretations in the philosophical mainstream. The latter entails a process of abstracting a philosophical legacy — or rather, of putting it in brackets — and then codifying a history of a l…Read more
  •  24
    Index
    with Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman, and Iris van der Tuin
    In Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman & Iris van der Tuin (eds.), Methods and Genealogies of New Materialisms, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 407-418. 2024.
  •  43
    The Politics of Feminist New Materialisms: Insights from Experimenting with Academic Practices
    with Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman, and Iris van der Tuin
    In Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman & Iris van der Tuin (eds.), Methods and Genealogies of New Materialisms, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 384-406. 2024.
  •  54
    Curated Panel: ‘Art as Laboratory for Modes of Being-With’
    with Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman, and Iris van der Tuin
    In Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman & Iris van der Tuin (eds.), Methods and Genealogies of New Materialisms, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 298-326. 2024.
  •  33
    Curated Panel: ‘New Materialisms across the Natural Sciences and Humanities: Trajectories, Inspirations and Stirrings’
    with Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman, and Iris van der Tuin
    In Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman & Iris van der Tuin (eds.), Methods and Genealogies of New Materialisms, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 212-238. 2024.
  •  117
    This chapter engages in a non-philosophical (Laruellian) discussion of the question of subjectivity and the status it holds in contemporary philosophy, in ontological, epistemic and political sense combined with the method of “exit from philosophy” as conceived and applied by Karl Marx. It is centered on problematization of the notion of “subjectivity” in line with the theses put forward by Marx in both his early and some of the later works: its status of the organizing principle, of the structu…Read more
  •  750
    Against Embodiment: Subjectivity Viewed from a Materialist Perspective
    Journal of the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists 2 (1-2). 2023.
    Just as in philosophy, truth—pure, immaterial “meaning” or simply value—takes a life of its own, even when purported to be materialist. The equation, M-C-M, can be transposed in P (Phallus) and C (femininity as commodity) amounting to P-C-P, and the argument is made by resorting to Marx and Irigaray via Laruelle.
  •  666
    Is the Poststructuralist Feminist Episteme in Crisis?, an Introduction to the special issue of Technophany " Technē and Feminism"
    with Vera Buehlmann
    Technophany: A Journal for Philosophy and Technology 2 (No. 1): 1-4. 2024.
    Departing from the premise that the poststructuralist paradigm still reigns supreme in feminist and gender theory, that is, despite the niche efforts made in the past two decades to challenge it linked to the so called “speculative” turn or the materialisms (and realisms) emerging from the feminist field itself (such as the Utrecht School, inspired by Rosi Braidotti), we set the call for papers for the issue before you in terms that would invite authors ready to challenge the dominant epistemic …Read more
  •  35
    An Atomist Genealogy of New Materialism
    In Rosi Braidotti, Felicity Colman & Iris van der Tuin (eds.), Methods and Genealogies of New Materialisms, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 56-77. 2024.
  • Structure, Matter and Pure Form: Marx, Laruelle and Irigaray
    Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture. 2020.
    A transcription of talk at a summer school in Marxist theory, science and philosophy, with the participation of Ray Brassier, Oxana Timofeeva and many more. The entire issue is available here. My paper can be found on pages 62 to 81. (The issue is bilingual, English and Macedonian) I am focusing primarily on the question of subjectivity and on the problematic constitution of this category we find in poststructuralism, a configuration which makes it hardly reconcilable or welcoming to an integrat…Read more
  •  534
    The Ebb of the Old Liberal Order and the Horizon of New Possibilities for Freedom
    In Adrian Parr & Santiago Zabala (eds.), Outspoken: A Manifesto for the Twenty-First Century, Mcgill-queen's University Press. pp. 39-46. 2023.
    The illiberals uphold democracy as a political form devoid of liberal values. The “illiberal democracy” repositions liberalism in the past, and by doing so it also frequently uses a language indistinguishable from that of the left critique of “global neoliberalism.” European leaders of this stripe were staunch supporters of Donald Trump. One of their intellectual figureheads is the French philosopher and journalist, often identified as fascist, Alain de Benoist, who, in his latest book, _Contre…Read more
  •  886
    Illiberal Democracies in Europe: An Authoritarian Response to the Crisis of Illiberalism (edited book)
    with Niccolo Milanese
    George Washington University. 2023.
    Our sense in editing this book is that the years since 2014 have shown that, however unpalatable, incoherent, and internally contradictory illiberal democracy may be, it is a political choice that is available at the ballot box in many countries. As critical scholars committed to democracy we have an obligation to understand its socio-historical construction, its emotional appeal, and its rhetorical force, to more effectively combat it. Ultimately, we believe that the difficulty many have had o…Read more
  •  635
    What Is Worth Salvaging in Modernity
    In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Žižek, understanding modernism, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 183-195. 2023.
    In what follows I will provide an explication of what the principle of philosophical sufficiency (PPS) refers to as conceptualized by François Laruelle, whereas, at the moment, suffice it to say that it is comparable to Marx’s extolling of the principle of praxis over that of philosophy as a critique of the philosophical “self-mirroring,” a thesis that pervades Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy in General (Marx, Manuscripts), German Ideology (1968), Theses on Feuerbach (1969). The self-mirroring …Read more
  •  33
    Building on discussions originating in post-humanism, the non-philosophy of François Laruelle, and the science of 'species being of humanity' stemming from Marx's critique of philosophy, Katerina Kolozova proposes a radical consideration of capitalism's economic exploitation of life. This book uses François Laruelle's work to think through questions of 'practical ethics' and bring the abstract tools of Laruelle's non-philosophy into conversation with other critical methods in the humanities. K…Read more
  •  7088
    Poststructuralism
    In Ásta . & Kim Q. Hall (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Philosophy. 2021.
    Abstract and Keywords This chapter offers an account of central issues and themes in feminist philosophical engagements with poststructuralism, reflection on examples of important contributions to this discussion, a discussion of the extent to which feminist work has engaged and critiqued the mainstream of the field, and feminist poststructuralist theorizations of the subject, identity, and culture. It also offers a critical genealogy of the epistemological paradigm poststrustructuralism has com…Read more
  •  30
    Thinking The Political By Way Of “Radical Concepts”
    International Journal of Žižek Studies 3 (1): 1-21. 2009.
    The article explores examples of theoretical endeavor to think the political in “accordance with the Real” that can be found in the works of François Laruelle, Alain Badiou and Slavoj Žižek. The task this article sets for itself is to establish an insight into – or rather, arrive to a certain vision and knowledge of – the possibilities of interrogating the modes of participation of the Real in the production of a Political Truth. I will claim the latter is not the product of Discourse exclusivel…Read more
  •  888
    VIOLENCE: the indispensable condition of the law
    Angelaki 19 (2): 99-111. 2014.
    Revolutionary violence stems from the conatus of survival, from the appetite for life and joy rather than from the desire to destroy and the hubristic pretension to punish. It is an incursion of one's desire to affirm life and annihilate pain. Following Laruelle's methodology of nonstandard philosophy, I conclude that revolutionary violence is the product of an intensive expansion of life. Pure violence, conceived in non-philosophical terms, is a pre-lingual, presubjective force affected by the …Read more
  •  90
    Philosophy as capitalism and the socialist radically metaphysical response to it
    Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 19 (1). 2017.
    The author starts from the thesis that there is no such thing as a "natural" or "apolitical" economy. The economy is always already political, as it is the economy’s material core of power, control, and its main mechanisms, i.e. exploitation and oppression. It is no less so in the era of neoliberalism, a time in which we witness the divorce between capitalism and democracy. In order to lay the foundations of a different economy, one that is not based on wage labor and the exploitation of human l…Read more
  •  991
    The scope of the paper is to present the concept of the radical dyad of the “non-human,” in an attempt to think radical humanity in terms of Marxian materialism, which is the product of approaching Marx’s writings on “the real” and “the physical” by way of François Laruelle’s non-philosophical method. Unlike posthumanism, inspired by critical theory and the method of poststructuralism, the theory of the non-human, as a radical dyad of technology in the generic sense of the word (ranging from the…Read more
  •  57
    The book explores the themes of a) “radical concepts” in politics (inspired by François Laruelle’s “non-Marxism” and “non-philosophy,” developed in accordance with Badiouan and Žižekian “realism”); b) politically relevant and applicable epistemologies of “Thought’s Correlating with the Real” (Laruelle), inspired by Laruelle, Badiou and Žižek and c) the possibility of hybridization of the epistemic stance of “radical concept” with the politics of grief and “identification with the suffering itsel…Read more
  •  1058
    Katerina Kolozova is a Macedonian philosopher whose publications from last two decades aim to analyze various topics using François Laruelle’s “non-philosophy” or “non-standard philosophy.” Non-philosophy could be roughly described as radicalized deconstruction: Laruelle claims that not everything can be grasped by a philosophy: for Laruelle, “philosophy is too serious an affair to be left to the philosophers alone.”1 Non-philosophy opposes the “principle of sufficient philosophy” through whic…Read more
  •  565
    Structure, Matter and Pure Form: Marx, Laruelle and Irigaray (transcript of a lecture)
    Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture 14 (1): 62-83. 2017.
    We will also problematize the concept of subjectivity and its centrality as problematized by Marx himself. We will consider his counter-proposal to look at things objectively, but not in the positivist sense of objectivity. It is not akin to object-oriented ontology either, because it looks like it is merging the subject and the object or that there the object is treated from a subjective position. I will explain this particular idea in Marx and that will lead us to the proposal I will present h…Read more
  •  25
    Following François Laruelle's nonstandard philosophy and the work of Judith Butler, Drucilla Cornell, Luce Irigaray, and Rosi Braidotti, Katerina Kolozova reclaims the relevance of categories traditionally rendered "unthinkable" by postmodern feminist philosophies, such as "the real," "the one," "the limit," and "finality," thus critically repositioning poststructuralist feminist philosophy and gender/queer studies. Poststructuralist (feminist) theory sees the subject as a purely linguistic cat…Read more
  •  586
    (A chapter in the book edited by Ine Gevers, Robot Love: Can We Learn from Robots About Love?) Similarly to the method employed by Marx in his analysis of the capital and to de Saussure’s structuralist explanation of language, I suggest we conceive the categories in question as materially conditioned while resulting into full abstraction in the process of analysis. Thus, instead of theorising in terms of the anthropologically (and philosophically) conditioned phantasm of a “digital subjectivity”…Read more
  •  728
    (A chapter in a book edited by Rocco Gangle and Julius Greve, titled Superpositions: Laruelle and the Humanities) The human-in-human is nonhuman or “inhuman” (Haraway), monstrous along with the animal, the machine and the darkness of the out-there insofar as it remains a radical hybridity or one that is philosophically unmediated. The real precedes signification and occupies the position of mere materiality (either physicality or machinic materiality) unilaterally situated vis-à-vis a signifying…Read more
  •  636
    [a chapter in a volume edited by DENNES (Maryse), Ó MAIOLEARCA (John), SCHMID (Anne-Françoise) (dir.), a Philosophie non-standard de François Laruelle , p. 127-135 La révolte ou la rébellion immanente est sans but, parce que sa seulesource et sa seule tendance est de se protéger contre la violence de l’aliénation,afin de défendre l’homme-en-homme qui est déterminé par sa vulnérabilitéradicale. Toute lutte politique émane du diktat de la rébellion immanente,celle du vécu radicalement solitair…Read more
  •  1068
    Theories of the Immanent Rebellion: Non-Marxism and Non-Christianity
    In John Mullarkey & Anthony Paul Smith (eds.), Laruelle and Non-Philosophy, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 209-226. 2012.
    (a chapter in Laruelle and Non-Philosophy, ed. John Mullarkey and Anthony Paul Smith) Orthodox reverence of transcendental constructs such as 'dialectical materialism' and the inability to reduce them to chôra - mere transcendental material instead of finished conceptual wholes - is what disables the completion of the project of stepping out of philosophy which Marxism initially set for itself (in the Theses on Feuerbach). In order to radicalise its position, argues Laruelle, and place itself o…Read more
  •  645
    The book explores the themes of a) “radical concepts” in politics (inspired by François Laruelle’s “non-Marxism” and “non-philosophy,” developed in accordance with Badiouan and Žižekian “realism”); b) politically relevant and applicable epistemologies of “Thought’s Correlating with the Real” (Laruelle), inspired by Laruelle, Badiou and Žižek and c) the possibility of hybridization of the epistemic stance of “radical concept” with the politics of grief and “identification with the suffering itsel…Read more
  •  52
    The human is materially determined by that “irrational” hybrid of the physical and machine resulting in no more and no less sense than the “pure body” (if such thing is possible beyond mere postulation) is endowed with. The “rational” part of it or the “agency of making sense” remains outside the materiality of either the body or the machine—it is the automaton of signification or language. The automaton of capital and philosophy is individually substantiated as “subjectivity,” and more specific…Read more
  •  741
    Subjectivity Without Physicality
    Palgrave Subjectivity 12 49-64. 2019.
    The concept of the subject relies on humanist presuppositions. Regardless of whether purported to be decentred and posthumanist, the subject conceived in poststructuralist and philosophical terms remains anthropocentric and anthropomorphic. There is something irrecuperably Cartesian in the poststructuralist idea of the subject. Physicality, both bodily and that of the materiality of the machinic prosthesis, is barred from the constitution of the Self, as the real is barred but also foreclosed to…Read more