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Oxford Literary Review

Appel aux communications: A Green Blanchot Revisited

Special Issue of the Oxford Literary Review 47.2, December 2025

Ed. Philippe Lynes

Since the publication of Timothy Clark’s essays, “A Green Blanchot: Impossible?” (Paragraph 30.3, 2007) and “Blanchot and the End of Nature” (Parallax 16.2, 2010), a new wave of interest in the relevance of Blanchot’s work to ecocriticism and environmental philosophy, as a sort of eco-deconstruction avant la lettre, has made itself felt. This can be read in Holly Langstaff’s Art and Technology in Maurice Blanchot (Edinburgh University Press, 2023), which demonstrates Blanchot’s ongoing importance for contemporary philosophical debates about technology, the post-human and ecological thinking, Jonathan Boulter’s Blanchot, Ecology and Contemporary Fiction: The Thought of the Disaster (Edinburgh University Press, 2023), which reads Blanchot’s idea of the disaster in relation to contemporary fiction of the United Kingdom and Ireland, as well as the German-language collection Die Apokalypse Enttäuscht: Atomtod, Klimakatastrophe, Kommunismus (eds. Alexander García-Düttmann and Marcus Quent, Diaphanes, 2023), which brings Blanchot’s 1964 essay “The Apocalypse Is Disappointing” into conversation with the climate catastrophe. Along with the recent influx of posthumous archival publications, including Thomas le Solitaire and Premiers récits (eds. Philippe Lynes and Leslie Hill, Kimé, 2022 and 2023), as well as his Notes sur Heidegger (eds. Étienne Pinat, Kimé, 2023), the work of the man who Jacques Derrida called one the three great minds of the 20th Century appears to once again be emerging from its perpetual obscurity.

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