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Suspensions of Perception is a major historical study
of human attention and its volatile role in modern Western culture. It
argues that the ways in which we intently look at or listen to
anything result from crucial changes in the nature of perception that
can be traced back to the second half of the nineteenth century.
Focusing on the period from about 1880 to 1905, Jonathan Crary
examines the connections between the modernization of subjectivity and
the dramatic expansion and industrialization of visual/auditory
culture. At the core of his project is the paradoxical nature of
modern attention, which was both a fundamental condition of individual
freedom, creativity, and experience and a central element in the
efficient functioning of economic and disciplinary institutions as
well as the emerging spaces of mass consumption and spectacle.
Crary approaches these issues through multiple analyses of single
works by three key modernist painters -- Manet, Seurat, and
Cézanne -- who each engaged in a singular confrontation with
the disruptions, vacancies, and rifts within a perceptual field. Each
in his own way discovered that sustained attentiveness, rather than
fixing or securing the world, led to perceptual disintegration and
loss of presence, and each used this discovery as the basis for a
reinvention of representational practices. Suspensions of
Perception> decisively relocates the problem of aesthetic
contemplation within a broader collective encounter with the unstable
nature of perception -- in psychology, philosophy, neurology, early
cinema, and photography. In doing so, it provides a historical
framework for understanding the current social crisis of attention
amid the accelerating metamorphoses of our contemporary technological
culture.
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