Collapse (journal)
Collapse is an independent, non-affiliated journal of philosophical research and development published in the United Kingdom by Urbanomic. It was founded in 2006 by Robin Mackay. It features speculative work in progress by contemporary philosophers, along with contributions from artists, scientists and other writers outside of philosophy.[1] In December 2008, as a part of BBC Today guest editor Zadie Smith's programme, the author Hari Kunzru listed Urbanomic's Collapse as an avant-garde philosophy journal in his A guide to the artistic underground.[2]
Content
In addition to philosophical articles, Collapse has published extensive interviews with notable philosophers and scientists including Alain Badiou, Julian Barbour, Nick Bostrom, Paul Churchland, Jack Cohen, James Ladyman, Thomas Metzinger, Ian Stewart and Roberto Trotta . Collapse has been closely connected with the growth of the contemporary philosophical tendency known as Speculative Realism and the journal has carried publications of new work by the philosophers most closely identified with this movement, Ray Brassier, Quentin Meillassoux, Graham Harman, and Iain Hamilton Grant.[1]
Notable contributors and interviewees
- Alain Badiou
- Julian Barbour
- Nick Bostrom
- Ray Brassier
- Gabriel Catren
- Jake and Dinos Chapman
- Milan Ćirković
- Jack Cohen
- Thomas Duzer
- Iain Hamilton Grant
- Graham Harman
- Michel Houellebecq
- Paul Humphreys
- James Ladyman
- Nick Land
- Thomas Ligotti
- Quentin Meillassoux
- Thomas Metzinger
- China Miéville
- Reza Negarestani
- Carlo Rovelli
- Conrad Shawcross
- Ian Stewart
- Roberto Trotta
- Keith Tyson
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Roffe, Jon (2007). "Collapse–Philosophical Research and Development". Parrhesia: A Journal of Critical Philosophy (4).
- ↑ "A guide to the artistic underground". BBC. 2008-12-29. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
External links
- Urbanomic website
- About Collapse
- Philosophy: Collapse Vol IV - Autopsy of a Genre (M/C Reviews)
- Robin Mackay, ed. Collapse: Philosophical research and development. Vol. 1 (Oxford: Philosophia Mathematica, vol. 15-2, 2007)