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Theodor W. Adorno died in 1969 and his last major work,
Ästhetische Theorie, was published posthumously a
year later. Few philosophers have been as well versed in contemporary
art, especially music, as Adorno, and even fewer have written so much
that is of interest to the social sciences. Yet only recently have
his aesthetic writings begun to receive sustained attention in the
English-speaking world. This collection of essays is an important
contribution to the growing discussion of Adorno's aesthetics in
Anglo-American scholarship.
The essays in the volume, by many of the major Adorno scholars in the
United States and Germany, are organized around the twin themes of
semblance and subjectivity. Whereas the concept of semblance, or
illusion, points to Adorno's links with Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud,
the concept of subjectivity recalls his lifelong struggle with a
philosophy of consciousness stemming from Kant, Hegel, and Luk¿cs.
Adorno's elaboration of the two concepts takes many dialecical twists.
Art, despite the taint of illusion that it has carried since Plato's
Republic, turns out in Adorno's account of modernism to
have a sophisticated capacity to critique illusion, including its own.
Adorno's aesthetics emphasizes the connection between aesthetic theory
and many other aspects of social theory. The paradoxical genius of
Aesthetic Theory is that it turns traditional concepts
into a theoretical cutting edge.
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