
New Books in Intellectual History Madeleine Chalmers, "French Technological Thought and the Nonhuman Turn" (Edinburgh UP, 2024)
14 snips
Oct 13, 2025 Madeleine Chalmers, a Lecturer in French Studies at the University of Leicester and author of *French Technological Thought and the Non-Human Turn*, dives into the intriguing link between Catholicism and contemporary technological thought. She explores how religious rhetoric influences secular discussions of agency and virtuality. Chalmers also examines the nuances of figurative language in understanding technology and reveals unexpected ties to surrealist thought. Her insights prompt a fresh look at literature's role in shaping modern attitudes towards technology.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Theological Roots Of The Nonhuman Turn
- Chalmers traces the non-human turn back to a late 19th-century Catholic mystic revival in France.
- She argues theology, avant-garde literature, and philosophy intermesh in French technological thought.
Undergrad Projects Sparked The Book
- Chalmers began studying technology in literature as an undergraduate with Villiers and Jarry.
- That early work seeded her doctoral project tracing continuous conversations about technology.
Literary Detective Work Reveals Genealogy
- Chalmers followed citations from contemporary theorists to recover a genealogy through obscure fin-de-siècle writers.
- She shows influential figures like Deleuze and Simondon draw on earlier literary avant-garde sources.






