Crimes of the Future: Theory and its Global Reproduction
Autor Professor Jean-Michel Rabatéen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 iun 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441172877
ISBN-10: 1441172874
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1441172874
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
A
thorough
exploration
of
the
past,
present
and
possible
future
of
theory
Notă biografică
Jean-Michel
Rabatéis
one
of
the
world's
foremost
literary
theorists.
He
is
Professor
of
English
and
Comparative
Literature
and
the
Vartan
Gregorian
Professor
in
the
Humanities
at
the
University
of
Pennsylvania,
USA.
Professor
Rabaté
has
authored
or
edited
more
than
thirty
books
on
modernism,
psychoanalysis,
contemporary
art,
philosophy,
and
writers
like
Beckett,
Pound
and
Joyce.
His
publications
includeThe
Ghosts
of
Modernity(2010),The
Ethic
of
the
Lie(2008),1913:
The
cradle
of
modernism(2007),
andThe
Future
of
Theory(2002).
He
is
the
Managing
Editor
of
theJournal
of
Modern
Literature.
He
is
a
Fellow
of
the
American
Academy
of
Arts
and
Sciences
and
is
currently
the
President
of
the
American
Samuel
Beckett
Studies
Association.
Cuprins
Introduction:
Crimes
of
the
FutureChapter
1.
How
global
should
Theory
be?
Chapter
2.
Theory
and
its
lines
of
flight:
Future,
Ancient,
Fugitive
Chapter
3.
Investigations
of
a
Kantian
dogChapter
4.
Divided
Truths
on
Lies:
Derrida
with
Hannah
Arendt
Chapter
5.
Derrida's
anterior
futures
Chapter
6.
A
Future
without
death?Chapter
7.
The
No
Future
of
an
IllusionChapter
8.
The
Styles
of
Theory:
Crimes
against
fecundityChapter
9:
Universalism
and
its
limits:
the
reasons
of
the
absurdChapter
10.
After
the
"Altermodern"Conclusion:
Laughing
at
the
long-lasting
joke
of
the
future
(Marx
and
Kafka,
Althusser
and
Antigone).Index
Recenzii
InCrimes
of
the
Future,
Jean-Michel
Rabaté
offers
the
reader
a
dazzling
series
of
encounters
with
thinkers,
writers
and
artists
who,
since
Kant,
have
fruitfully
complicated
our
sense
of
the
future.
Moving
with
ease
across
a
remarkable
range
of
subjects
(in
both
senses)
and
several
linguistic
and
philosophical
traditions,
Rabaté
teases
out
threads
that
link
Mishima
and
Benjamin,
Kafka
and
Hegel,
Althusser
and
Antigone,
and
very
many
more.
The
result
is
an
exhilarating
and
illuminating
intellectual
workout.
InCrimes of the FutureRabaté demonstrates why Theory has a future; a vital one that sets out to answer the question 'how global should Theory be?' Rabaté rethinks a tradition grounded in philosophical and psychoanalytic approaches to theories of the subject for the human sciences today. New materialisms, object relations, technological and digital languages, ethics and bioethics, post-feminism and post-humanism, these are among the rich tendencies and problems foregrounded in this study. The intellectual topography is spot-on. There are few books that provide such a comprehensive and coherent overview of theory between 2001 and 2014 or that experiment with new conjugations so boldly.
Crimes of the Future, Theory and its Global Reproductiondoes not only concern itself with modernity's obsession with producing a homeless subjectivity, but commensurately, with the face off between the individual and the community, the universal and the particular. It also admits to the thrill that we moderns experience even before our crime - the crime of the destruction of the past - is or was committed. Our expectation in the face of our crime is one with the thrill of the atomic eruption, the bomb blast. It leaves behind only the ironic laughter accompanying the destruction of ancient values that we theorists are not simply helpless to stop but actively engaged in producing as we too seek to participate in the infernal globalized production of ideas.
Jean-Michel Rabaté's Crimes of the Future reunites a number of interconnected essays that address the meaning and significance of theory in today's world. As the critic demonstrates, these are urgent issues. . Counterintuitive as it may sound, theory has actually flourished in its post-theory days. Crimes of the Future demonstrates this explicitly, through the specific argument it builds across its chapters, and implicitly, as a wide-ranging and authoritative theoretical intervention itself. . Replete with remarkably insightful and through-provoking connections, exceptionally learned and timely, Crimes of the Future provides a comprehensive and well-balanced assessment of theory's significance in the present and future global world.
InCrimes of the FutureRabaté demonstrates why Theory has a future; a vital one that sets out to answer the question 'how global should Theory be?' Rabaté rethinks a tradition grounded in philosophical and psychoanalytic approaches to theories of the subject for the human sciences today. New materialisms, object relations, technological and digital languages, ethics and bioethics, post-feminism and post-humanism, these are among the rich tendencies and problems foregrounded in this study. The intellectual topography is spot-on. There are few books that provide such a comprehensive and coherent overview of theory between 2001 and 2014 or that experiment with new conjugations so boldly.
Crimes of the Future, Theory and its Global Reproductiondoes not only concern itself with modernity's obsession with producing a homeless subjectivity, but commensurately, with the face off between the individual and the community, the universal and the particular. It also admits to the thrill that we moderns experience even before our crime - the crime of the destruction of the past - is or was committed. Our expectation in the face of our crime is one with the thrill of the atomic eruption, the bomb blast. It leaves behind only the ironic laughter accompanying the destruction of ancient values that we theorists are not simply helpless to stop but actively engaged in producing as we too seek to participate in the infernal globalized production of ideas.
Jean-Michel Rabaté's Crimes of the Future reunites a number of interconnected essays that address the meaning and significance of theory in today's world. As the critic demonstrates, these are urgent issues. . Counterintuitive as it may sound, theory has actually flourished in its post-theory days. Crimes of the Future demonstrates this explicitly, through the specific argument it builds across its chapters, and implicitly, as a wide-ranging and authoritative theoretical intervention itself. . Replete with remarkably insightful and through-provoking connections, exceptionally learned and timely, Crimes of the Future provides a comprehensive and well-balanced assessment of theory's significance in the present and future global world.