Abstract

The notion of materialism initially appears in the writings of its Christian opponents in late seventeenth-century England. Only in eighteenth-century France materialism is first posthumously claimed by a catholic priest, Meslier, and then by authors such as La Mettrie and d’Holbach, at the risk of persecution and imprisonment: Diderot enjoys the hospitality of the fortress of Vincennes for rearranging the materialist stance within his sensualist multiverse. In the nineteenth century, Marx reshapes materialism as part of his critique to decontextualized knowledge. Stirner’s discontent with naturalistic objectivity anticipates Nietzsche’s rejection of matter in favour of practices: Engels’ historical materialism and his ahistorical dichotomic construction of materialism versus idealism are instead embraced by Lenin via Plekhanov, and they are further simplified by Stalin. Nietzsche’s approach is recovered by Foucault, Deleuze, and Derrida, who challenge both political and theoretical representation. More recently, Barad recasts this challenge into a processual vocabulary, which renews the semantic constellation of realism, materialism, and materiality. Whilst not dismissing Barad’s new tools, the essay suggests raising the wager: it proposes to extend its own genealogical practice, which reconnects materialism (and matter) with its historical process of production, to any other theoretical object. This recomposition may not only disentangle us from the lexicon of entities – including materialism and matter – but it may also help to construct a novel and potentially hegemonic language of practices.

Highlights

  • In dealing with the notion of materialism, one is reminded of Friedrich Nietzsche’s warning: ‘only that which has no history can be defined’1 (2006: 53)

  • Any definition of materialism would entail a denial of the history of materialism itself

  • A definition of materialism would deny two histories: the history of the doctrines that claimed the explicit definition of materialism and the history of the doctrines to which this definition was ascribed

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Summary

Introduction

In dealing with the notion of materialism, one is reminded of Friedrich Nietzsche’s warning: ‘only that which has no history can be defined’1 (2006: 53). The essay will follow the uses of the word ‘materialism’ from its emergence in English late seventeenth-century texts to contemporary times: by doing so, it will provide a rough mapping of the historical trajectory of the corresponding notion of materialism on a textual basis.

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