MIT CogNet, The Brain Sciences ConnectionFrom the MIT Press, Link to Online Catalog
SPARC Communities
Subscriber : Stanford University Libraries » LOG IN

space

Powered By Google 
Advanced Search

Selected Title Details  
Apr 1997
ISBN 0262082578
352 pp.
2 illus.
BUY THE BOOK
The Semblance of Subjectivity
Tom Huhn and Lambert Zuidervaart

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.

Table of Contents
 Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
by Lambert Zuidervaart
2 Mimesis and Mimetology: Adorno and Lacoue-Labarthe
by Martin Jay
3 Aesthetic Theory's Mimesis of Walter Benjamin
by Shierry Weber Nicholsen
4 Benjamin, Adorno, Surrealism
by Richard Wolin
5 Concept, Image, Name: On Adorno's Utopia of Knowledge
by Rolf Tiedemann
6 Concerning the Central Idea of Adorno's Philosophy
by Rüdiger Bubner
7 Why Rescue Semblance? Metaphysical Experience and the Possibility of Ethics
by J. M. Bernstein
8 Adorno's Notion of Natural Beauty: A Reconsideration
by Heinz Paetzold
9 Kant, Adorno, and the Social Opacity of the Aesthetic
by Tom Huhn
10 Art History and Autonomy
by Gregg M. Horowitz
11 Construction of a Gendered Subject: A Feminist Reading of Adorno's Aesthetic Theory
by Sabine Wilke and Heidi Schlipphacke
12 The Philosophy of Dissonance: Adorno and Schoenberg
by Robert Hullot-Kentor
 Select Bibliography
 Contributors
 Index
 
Options
Related Topics
Philosophy


© 2010 The MIT Press
MIT Logo