Adorno and the Ban on Images
Autor Sebastian Truskolaskien Limba Engleză Hardback – 13 ian 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350129207
ISBN-10: 1350129208
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350129208
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
The book provides a condensed reconstruction of Adorno's overall project, thus serving as an introduction to this difficult thinkers' voluminous body of work.
Notă biografică
Sebastian Truskolaski is Lecturer in German and Comparative Literature at King's College London, UK. His research focuses on the relationship between modern and contemporary art, literature and philosophy.
Cuprins
Acknowledgements Prelude: Adorno and the Ban on ImagesChapter One: Imageless MaterialismPart I: MaterialismPart II: Imagelessness Chapter Two: Inverse TheologyPart I: Theology Part II: Inversion Chapter Three: Aesthetic NegativityPart I: Aesthetics Part II: Natural Beauty Reprise: 'Zum Ende'Notes Bibliography Index
Recenzii
This is a breathtaking exploration of one of the most evocative and undertheorized themes in Adorno's oeuvre. In this searching, lucid and dazzlingly original study, Sebastian Truskolaski manages to achieve what no-one has even attempted. He extricates the "ban on images" from religious pieties and from platitudes about the inexpressible-unimaginable-unspeakable, and demonstrates compellingly that this rigorously disenchanted figure lies at the heart of Adorno's peculiar materialism and is the key to its radical utopian promise. This is a new, exciting reading of Adorno that will also transform the way we think about art and politics today.
In this exciting new book, Sebastian Truskolaski unpacks the ban on images around which he argues Adorno's thinking is organized. Far from miring us in an abyss of despair, as Truskolaski presents it, the Adornian Bilderverbot not only offers considerable resources for challenging the status quo, but an incipient method for thinking our escape.
Adorno and the Ban on Images admirably articulates the significance of Adorno's reworking of the Old Testament ban on images in a variety of contexts, ranging from the musicological to the literary, and from the epistemological to the historical. Through strategic imbrication of meticulous scholarship, sober theoretical vigilance, and critical inventiveness-qualities that are increasingly rare to find-Truskolaski convincingly illuminates a central concern of Adorno's notoriously refractory thinking.
The most interesting dimension of Truskolaski's book is its forceful evocation of a political orientation in Adorno's thought through an explication of the image ban ... His work will be useful not only to those who work on Adorno and the Frankfurt School more generally, but also to anyone with an interest in the theoretical and practical challenges facing the struggle toward a world free of exploitation.
In this exciting new book, Sebastian Truskolaski unpacks the ban on images around which he argues Adorno's thinking is organized. Far from miring us in an abyss of despair, as Truskolaski presents it, the Adornian Bilderverbot not only offers considerable resources for challenging the status quo, but an incipient method for thinking our escape.
Adorno and the Ban on Images admirably articulates the significance of Adorno's reworking of the Old Testament ban on images in a variety of contexts, ranging from the musicological to the literary, and from the epistemological to the historical. Through strategic imbrication of meticulous scholarship, sober theoretical vigilance, and critical inventiveness-qualities that are increasingly rare to find-Truskolaski convincingly illuminates a central concern of Adorno's notoriously refractory thinking.
The most interesting dimension of Truskolaski's book is its forceful evocation of a political orientation in Adorno's thought through an explication of the image ban ... His work will be useful not only to those who work on Adorno and the Frankfurt School more generally, but also to anyone with an interest in the theoretical and practical challenges facing the struggle toward a world free of exploitation.