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Ten everyday lessons
Read more: Ten everyday lessonsChantelle Gray offers a vivid tribute to Deleuze and Guattari’s radical becomings, calling for creative resistance and world-making.


Chantelle Gray offers a vivid tribute to Deleuze and Guattari’s radical becomings, calling for creative resistance and world-making.

by Helena Heald While the Greek and Latin languages have been studied at the University of Edinburgh since its foundation…

The editors of Philosophy, Politics and Critique reflect on the contested meanings of the terms which give the journal its name.

Millions of displaced people don’t count as refugees. Who are they, and how can they be better protected by political and legal systems?

by Marissa Greenberg and Elizabeth Williamson Perhaps the greatest challenge facing US institutions of higher education is the tension between…

Discover the history of Philosophy publishing at Edinburgh University Press, from our extensive publishing in Deleuze and Guattari Studies, to a ground-breaking new series in World Philosophies.

Ian Buchanan responds to Donna Haraway's reading of Deleuze and Guattari on the notion of becoming-animal

Reinterpreting the history of Scotland's northern islands.

How does the telegraph function as both a material invention and an object of desire?

On the third anniversary of the seizure of Kabul, Robert D. Crews asks how we make sense of the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan.