Posthuman Studies Association - PSA

Posthuman Studies Association - PSA The Association supports and promotes academic engagement with posthuman theories, ideas, practices, and concepts.

The Posthuman Studies Association is a non-profit association that seeks to explore the posthuman paradigm shift connected to the Antropocene, the Fourth Industrial Revolution, as well as the Post-Darwinian evolutionary turn. It seeks to critically analyze the intricate entanglements between science, technology, ethics, aesthetics, art, culture, society, and humanity in the contemporary world. The

Association aims to foster, advance, and enhance research in the field of posthuman studies within both national and international cultural and academic communities. The mission of the association is to explore how current and future emerging technologies, as well as existential threats, influence our present and shape our future. Part of this mission is to enhance our understanding of the philosophical, cultural, aesthetic, ethical, social, and political impact of emerging technologies such as digital technologies, gene technologies, brain-computer interfaces, AI technologies, cyborg technologies, and robots. One of the main objectives of the association is to promote dialogue and collaboration among academic communities and researchers, both within Romania and across the globe, who are involved in the rich field of posthuman studies. This encompasses a wide range of schools of thought, i.e., cultural, existential, European, philosophical, radical, and speculative posthumanism, as well as original, classic, and Euro-transhumanism, metahumanism, and humanism. The Association aims to develop a platform for interdisciplinary academic collaboration, promoting open discussions, innovative theories, and practices that deepen our understanding with respect to the posthuman paradigm shift, the world, and the impact of our actions within it. By organizing a variety of events—including international and national conferences, workshops, meetings, symposiums, roundtable discussions, seminars, debates, etc.—the Association aims to engage researchers and experts from Romania and abroad to bring their support to the field of posthuman studies. The Association aims to foster a diverse and inclusive academic community. By actively promoting diversity and inclusion in its projects and activities, the Association aims to create a welcoming and supportive environment for researchers, artists, philosophers, transhumanists, posthumanists, metahumanists, and humanists from all backgrounds. By encouraging open and creative dialogue, the Association aims to make significant contributions to our understanding of the complex relationships between humans and technology in the 21st century.

New Publication ! H.P. Lovecraft and Posthumanism  Authors:  Márk Horváth, Ádám Lovász, and Márió Z. Nemes Series: Criti...
25/04/2026

New Publication ! H.P. Lovecraft and Posthumanism
Authors: Márk Horváth, Ádám Lovász, and Márió Z. Nemes

Series: Critical Posthumanisms
Volume: 9
ISBN: 978-90-04-75482-9
Publication: 07 May 2026

Publisher: Brill
https://brill.com/display/title/72237

CALL FOR ABSTRACTSCSP Colloquium 2026 Cross-cultural Conversations in Euro- and African TranshumanismOctober 1-2, 2026 (...
21/04/2026

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
CSP Colloquium 2026
Cross-cultural Conversations
in Euro- and African Transhumanism
October 1-2, 2026 (Online)
Link: https://cspcolloquium.transhumanistsafrica.org/
Organizer: The Conversational School of Philosophy (CSP), in collaboration with Transhumanists Africa (TA), and the Posthuman Studies Association (PSA)
Convenor: Dr. Ojochogwu Abdul (University of Abuja, Nigeria; Transhumanists Africa; and the Conversational School of Philosophy)
Keynote Speakers:
Prof. Dr. Stefan Lorenz Sorgner – John Cabot University, Rome, Italy
Prof. Josue Yoroba Guebo – Felix Houphouet Boigny University, Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire
CONCEPT NOTE
The Conversational School of Philosophy (CSP), in collaboration with Transhumanists Africa (TA) and the Posthuman Studies Association (PSA), invites papers for a virtual colloquium in October 2026 entitled “Cross-cultural Conversations in Euro- and African Transhumanism.” This event explores how African and European philosophical and cultural traditions shape differing visions of human enhancement. Classic transhumanism, propounded by the likes of Bostrom (2005, 2012), Pearce (1995), Fuller (2011), and Sandberg (2013), and often associated with Silicon Valley (alongside the hub’s liberal and libertarian outlooks), is frequently critiqued as overly individualistic and technocratic, whereas European thinkers (Sorgner, 2022, 2026; Schussler and Balistreri, 2024) have proposed a Euro-Transhumanism grounded in Europe’s Continental philosophy and humanistic tradition. Stefan Lorenz Sorgner (2026), for example, describes Euro- Transhumanism as a “distinctive, philosophically rich alternative to the individualistic, technocratic focus of classic transhumanism”. This approach emphasizes social consciousness, diversity of flourishing, and continuity with European ideals of truth, goodness and beauty.
Meanwhile, African scholars emphasize how communal values, normative personhood, and progressive re-interpretations of tradition intersect with enhancement technologies. Philosopher Ademola Fayemi defends an Afrofuturistic account of personhood that harmonizes traditional African ontologies with modern science. Fayemi (2018) argues that African concepts of the self (e.g. the Yoruba notion of inu, or inner self) are inherently dynamic and “alterable”. His reconstruction shows that an African-inspired idea of personhood can “accommodate science and technology” alongside religious and communal values. Similarly, other scholars note that Ubuntu (or an African humanism) supports transhumanist goals; as one study concludes, the “embedded values of African humanism deserve to be taken seriously in galvanizing global trust in transhuman futures” (Ewuoso and
Fayemi, 2021). In other words, African ethical traditions and community-oriented philosophies (like Ubuntu) can provide important guidance for responsible human enhancement.
Afrofuturism, an influential speculative concept in Africa-oriented transhumanist discussions, have been described as “a cultural and political framework for reimagining possibilities” that centers Black experiences and agency in future visions, and which emphasizes that “futures are made – and that who gets to imagine them is a political question” (Brooks and Anderson, 2025). Interestingly, Nigerian-American science fiction and fantasy writer Nnedi Okorafor initiates a distinction between Afrofuturism – understood as centering the diasporic, historical experiences and realities of African-Americans/”Blacks” – and Africanfuturism, which is deeply and directly rooted in African culture, history, mythology, cosmology and worldview (Okorafor, 2019). As Okorafor affirms, Africanfuturism envisions the future, engages with technology, explores space, leans toward optimism, and is primarily created by and centered on people of black African origin. This strand ultimately imagines futures that are situated in or emanate from the African continent, thus marking a distinction from Afrofuturism which centers the Black Diaspora or the West. Noting such distinctive currents, Abdul (Forthcoming) explores an “African futures” philosophy network comprising a triad of Afrofuturism, Africanfuturism, and Afropolitanism, intended to set a framework for innovative engagement, re-interpretations, and re-imaginations of the traditions, experiences, realities, cultural expressions, science, philosophies, and aspirations of the broader African world (continental and diasporic), and to project fluid or dynamic understandings of the African way of being in the world, as such that they significantly present “African modernist” pathways which embrace novelty and permit openness and adaptation to emerging/enhancement technologies, thought, and values. Ideas set forth in the aforementioned discourses, importantly, lay the groundwork for possible constructions of an African Transhumanism.
This colloquium aims to spark an intercultural dialogue between these perspectives, i.e., African and European. We welcome contributions that examine how European and African intellectual traditions converge or diverge in their approach to technology and the future of humanity. Papers might contrast the Africa-centered philosophies with European approaches that draw on continental humanist legacies, or explore hybrid models emerging from African- European exchanges. In general, we encourage work that brings out cross- cultural/intercultural themes concerning transhumanism – for example, comparing ethics of enhancement in communitarian versus individualistic societies, examining the role of tradition, spirituality, or secular humanism in different contexts, or analyzing the impact of postcolonial, decolonial, transcolonial, and global justice concerns on transhumanist discourse.
PROPOSED TOPICS
Possible sub-topics include (but are not limited to):
Afrofuturism, Africanfuturism, and African tech-futures: How Black and African art, literature and philosophy reimagine future technologies and enhancement.
Afrocommunitarianism, African personhood, and Transhumanism: Communal ethics and traditional values (e.g. Ubuntu, inu) in relation to biotechnology and enhancement.
Euro-Transhumanism: European philosophical frameworks (e.g. Sorgner’s vision) that critique Silicon Valley transhumanism and emphasize social and cultural heritage.
Comparative ethics: Individualism vs. communitarianism in enhancement debates, and how differing value-systems shape policies on augmentation.
Postcolonial, decolonial, transcolonial, and global justice dimensions: How histories and discourses of colonialism, inequality, globalization, Third Space, and negotiation influence African and European transhumanist agendas.
Religion and spirituality: The role of religious beliefs and metaphysics in acceptance or critique of human enhancement technologies across cultures.
Science and secularism: The role of science, scientific advancement/worldview, and secular (or secular humanistic) values in influencing acceptance or critique of human enhancement technologies across cultures.
Intercultural dialogues: Case studies of intellectual exchange between African and European thinkers (or diasporic communities) on technology, identity, and the future of humanity.
Diaspora perspectives: How African diasporic communities (in Europe, the Americas, etc.) bridge or transform Euro- and African-centered transhumanist ideas. How European diasporic communities in Africa (or Africans of European descent) bridge or transform Euro- and African-centered transhumanist ideas.
Afropolitanism and Afropean perspectives: How circulation of the worlds/worlds in movement (Mbembe 2005, 2020), dispersion and immersion, African mobilities, transnationalism, interconnectedness, in-between-ness, multi-local belongings, multidimensional thinking, heterogeneity, hyperculturality, conviviality, antagonism, postmodernism, freedom, fluidity of identities, and hybridization of African and European beings and lived/shared experiences disrupt essentialism and connect, disjoint, or transform Euro-and-African-centered transhumanist perspectives.
Postracialism and/or Postracialized Societies: How would human enhancement technologies impact the concept of race? What would African and European identities mean or matter in a transhumanist civilization or posthuman world?
Submission Instructions
Authors should email their abstract (300 words max), alongside the paper title, author name(s), affiliation(s), contact information, and five keywords, as Microsoft Word document to [email protected] before or by June 30, 2026. All submissions must be in English.
IMPORTANT DATES
Abstract submission deadline: June 30, 2026
Notification of acceptance: July 21, 2026
Date of Colloquium: October 1-2, 2026
PUBLICATION
The best papers from the colloquium will be published in an essay collection with the Transhumanism and Africa book series (edited by Dr. Ojochogwu Abdul and Dr. Leo Igwe) under the Trivent Transhumanism imprint. Each paper should be between 5000 and 7000 words, and all submissions will undergo a peer review process.
Contact and Further Information
For submission or inquiries, contact the convenor Ojochogwu Abdul at [email protected]. For information on the Conversational School of Philosophy, Transhumanists Africa, and Posthuman Studies Association, please visit – respectively - the CSP website: www.cspafrica.org; TA website: www.transhumanistsafrica.org; and PSA website: www.posthumanstudies.org

A thought-provoking documentary film.
08/04/2026

A thought-provoking documentary film.

Dokumentarfilm Göttliche Technik? Die Glücksversprechen des Transhumanismus Filmpremiere: 06./07. März 2026 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvoC7gdey5U Was passiert, wenn Technik zur neuen Religion wird? Der von der Stiftung initiierte und geförderte Dokumentarfilm „Göttliche Technik?“ […...

New Podcast: BRAINLANDTRANSHUMANISM: Humanity's great hope or the devil's work? An intriguing conversation with Stefan L...
25/03/2026

New Podcast: BRAINLAND
TRANSHUMANISM: Humanity's great hope or the devil's work?
An intriguing conversation with Stefan Lorenz Sorgner, Associate Professor of Philosophy at John Cabot University, Rome, Director and co-founder of the Beyond Humanism Network, and Fellow at the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies.
He’s joined by Ken Barrett, artist, writer, and retired neuropsychiatrist.
Link:

In conversation with Stefan Lorenz Sorgner

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS! CSP Colloquium 2026. Cross-cultural Conversations in Euro- and African Transhumanism, October 1-2, 2...
24/03/2026

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS! CSP Colloquium 2026. Cross-cultural Conversations in Euro- and African Transhumanism, October 1-2, 2026 (Online) https://cspcolloquium.transhumanistsafrica.org/
Keynote Speakers:
Prof. Dr. Stefan Lorenz Sorgner (John Cabot University, Rome, Italy)
Prof. Josue Yoroba Guebo (Felix Houphouet Boigny University, Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire)
Abstract submission deadline: June 30, 2026

The essay collection "Digital Wellbeing in the Posthuman Era" which was edited by Evi Sampanikou and Evangelia Kavakli h...
28/02/2026

The essay collection "Digital Wellbeing in the Posthuman Era" which was edited by Evi Sampanikou and Evangelia Kavakli has just been published in open access: https://trivent-publishing.eu/.../219-digital-wellbeing... I contributed the preface as well as the article The Posthuman Paradigm-Shift, Beauty, and Art. It came out in the newly established book series which is entitled "Posthuman Arts", Trivent Publishing, H-1119 Budapest, Etele u. 59-61 The SERIES EDITOR is Evi Sampanikou, PhD, Professor of Visual Culture and Art History at the Department of Cultural Technology and Communication, University of the Aegean, Greece, [email protected] Please feel free to get in contact with her, if oyu plan to publish a book in this series!
ABOUT THE SERIES
"Posthuman Arts" is an interdisciplinary book series dedicated to exploring the dynamic intersections between artistic practice, technological innovation, and posthumanist and transhumanist thought. The series investigates how emerging technologies — from artificial intelligence and biotechnology to immersive media and digital fabrication — are reshaping aesthetics, embodiment, creativity, and cultural production.
The series welcomes critical and experimental approaches that examine how art both reflects and actively shapes posthuman futures. It aims to foster dialogue across philosophy, media studies, digital humanities, performance studies, visual culture, science and technology studies, and beyond.
We accept proposals on topics such as posthuman and transhumanist aesthetics; AI and creativity; bioart and biotechnological practices; digital embodiment and augmented bodies; interactive, immersive, and XR art; robotics and performance; art and the ethics of enhancement; the metaverse, NFTs, and digital materiality; speculative futures and science fiction in visual culture; art, agency, and relational ontology; critical theory of technology and artistic practice, etc.
The series welcomes monographs and edited volumes that offer innovative, theoretically engaged, and interdisciplinary perspectives on art in the age of technological transformation.

Edited by Evi Sampanikou and Evangelia Kavakli Publication date: December, 2025 Pages: 232 eISBN 978-615-7058-04-0 eBook, Open Access This book is fully (and only) available in open access.

CFP "MAKING SELF, MAKING WORLDS": Existential Posthumanism in INDIA 2026! Dearest All, we hope You are Well!  We are dee...
03/10/2025

CFP "MAKING SELF, MAKING WORLDS": Existential Posthumanism in INDIA 2026! Dearest All, we hope You are Well! We are deeply honored to share the Call for Papers (CFP) for the Second International Conference on Existential Posthumanism: "Posthuman Renaissances: Making Self, Making Worlds", to be held at Presidency University, Kolkata, 14–16 January 2026. In this fragmented world, this unique event seeks to create a serene space where we can come together, co-exist, and manifest new possibilities. The conference is experiential and experimental, offering not only academic debates and talks but also fostering a sense of glocal community through workshops and activities at local places of interest: unity in diversity. This is going to be transformative: we hope you can join us! Additionally, there will be a pre-event in Auroville from 8–10 January—details coming soon. The CFP is attached below. Submission deadline: October 2025: https://puconference20262.wixsite.com/pu-conference
Peace, Visions and Posthuman Blessings to You All!

📣New Issue! Journal of Posthuman Studies, Volume 9, Issue 1September 2025.ISSN 2472-4513EISSN 2471-4461Enjoy reading the...
02/10/2025

📣New Issue! Journal of Posthuman Studies, Volume 9, Issue 1
September 2025.
ISSN 2472-4513
EISSN 2471-4461
Enjoy reading the issue below:

Journal of Posthuman Studies | 9 | 1 | September 2025

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