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Tristan Garcia

Tristan Garcia
Born (1981-04-05) April 5, 1981 (age 36)
Toulouse, France
Era 21st-century philosophy
Region Western Philosophy
School Speculative Realism

Tristan Garcia (born 5 April 1981) is a French philosopher and novelist. His first novel, La meilleure part des hommes (2008), won France’s Prix de Flore. It was translated into English in 2010 with the title Hate: A Romance. His most important philosophical work, Form and Object, was translated into English in 2014.

Garcia was born in Toulouse to academic parents. His most formative years were spent in Algeria. He studied philosophy at the École Normale Supérieure, and wrote his dissertation under Sandra Laugier. He currently teaches at Jean Moulin University Lyon 3.

Garcia's first novel, La meilleure part des hommes (2008), won France’s Prix de Flore. It was translated into English in 2010 with the title Hate: A Romance. The novel follows four lives from the rise of the Marais gay scene through Sarkozy's presidency, and it depicts the impact of HIV/AIDS in Paris. Garcia has said that he deliberately wrote a novel about events he did not experience in an effort to move away from the trend of autofiction in France.

Reviewing the English translation, Joanna Biggs praised the novel, calling it "compelling," and concluding that "the reader becomes as addicted to the unfolding drama as the narrator is." Alexander Nazaryan wrote that the book is "surprisingly taut and readable." He continued to praise the book for being "the kind of social novel his American counterparts too often avoid in favor of solipsistic musings." Nazaryan also criticized the work, writing that "Garcia is fluent in the currents of thought that have animated recent French history, and he has the dexterity to be flippant and morbid within a single paragraph. But he has more digging to do in the human heart. The novel is hermetic in its singular occupation with the disastrous relationship between Doum and Will and the corollary romance between Liz and the married Leibowitz. Though all four have plausibly prominent roles in French culture, at times it appears as if no other figures of consequence exist, with secondary characters strutting too quickly across the stage."

Form and Object can be grouped together with other works of speculative realism and object-oriented ontology by philosophers like Graham Harman and Manuel DeLanda. Garcia positions his work against "philosophies of access," which seek to theorize the limitations of subjective access to objective reality. Instead, Garcia proposes beginning to think about things before thinking about our conditions of access to those things. The book is divided into two parts: Book 1, titled "Formally," and Book 2, titled "Objectively." The first book proposes an ontology of a flat world, in which all things are seen as being equally things, where the second book describes more specific objects, like animals, class, and gender.


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