Fungal Intelligence and the Posthuman: Mycohuman Art, Entangled Theory, and Fungi in (Eco-)Gothic Narratives

Authors

  • Susanne Gruss University of Bamberg, Germany

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33182/joph.v4i2.3341

Keywords:

Contemporary art, Ecogothic fungi, Fungal intelligence, Mexican gothic, The beauty

Abstract

Fungi have become paradigmatic for the wonders, the adaptability, and the resilience of the nonhuman in publications, ranging
from Anna Tsing Lowenhaupt’s anthropological analysis of the matsutake mushroom (2015) to Merlin Sheldrake’s popular
take on the ‘world-making’ capacity of fungi (2020). This article explores different conceptualisations of ‘fungal intelligence’ and
the posthuman in art, (popular) science, and literature. It argues that fungi are invested with a utopian potential in the first two.
In literary texts, however, encounters of the human and the fungal worlds and the concomitant creation of a fungal posthuman
veer towards the gothic. In a three-step argument, the article moves from the world of contemporary art to the recent flurry of textual
production about fungi in anthropology and (popular) science and the construction of fungal intelligence in many of these texts.

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Published

2024-09-10

How to Cite

Gruss, S. (2024). Fungal Intelligence and the Posthuman: Mycohuman Art, Entangled Theory, and Fungi in (Eco-)Gothic Narratives. Journal of Posthumanism, 4(2), 141–149. https://doi.org/10.33182/joph.v4i2.3341

Issue

Section

Dossier: Posthuman Encounters - Desires, Fears, and the Uncanny