Aesthetic Marx
Editat de Samir Gandesha, Johan F. Hartleen Limba Engleză Paperback – 3 mai 2018
This book offers an original and challenging study of both Marx in the aesthetic, and the aesthetic in Marx. It differs from previous discussions of Marxist aesthetic theory as it understands the works of Marx themselves as contributions to thinking the aesthetic. This is an engagement with Marx's aesthetic that takes into account Marx's broader sense of the aesthetic, as identified by Eagleton and Buck-Morss - as a question of sense perception and the body. It explores this through questions of style and substance in Marx and extends it into contemporary questions of how this legacy can be perceived or directed analytically in the present.
By situating Marx in contemporary art debates this volume speaks directly to lively interest today in the function of the aesthetic in accounts of emancipatory politics and is essential reading for researchers and academics across the fields of political philosophy, art theory, and Marxist scholarship.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350074712
ISBN-10: 1350074713
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 35 b&w
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350074713
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 35 b&w
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction
Section I: Aesthetics / Emancipations
Chapter 1: Three Logics of the Aesthetic in Marx
Samir Gandesha, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Chapter 2: Poiesis, Praxis, Aisthesis: Remarks on Aristotle and Marx
Henry Pickford, Duke University, USA
Chapter 3: "Sensuous Supra-Sensuous": The Aesthetics of Real Abstraction
Sami Khatib, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Chapter 4: Free Associations: On Marx and Freud
Johan F. Hartle, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Section II: Style and Performativity in Marx
Chapter 5: On Beauty and its Challenges: Friedrich Theodor Vischer and Karl Marx
Anna Katharina Gisbertz, University of Mannheim, Germany
Chapter 6: Marx: The Philosophical Defense of History in the Metonymical Mode
Hayden White, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Chapter 7: Imagery as Weaponry: ars gratia belli
Terrell Carver, University of Bristol, UK
Chapter 8: Radical Schiller and Young Marx
Daniel Hartley, University of Leeds, UK
Section III: Modes of Artistic Production
Chapter 9: Installing Communism
Boris Groys, New York University, USA
Chapter 10: Marx's Aesthetics in Mexico: Conceptual Art After 1968
Robin Greeley, University of Connecticut, USA
Chapter 11: Filming Capital: On Cinemarxism in the Twenty-first Century
Sven Lütticken, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Chapter 12: Marx as Art as Politics: Representations of Marx in Contemporary Arts
Johan H. Hartle, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
List of Illustrations
Section I: Aesthetics / Emancipations
Chapter 1: Three Logics of the Aesthetic in Marx
Samir Gandesha, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Chapter 2: Poiesis, Praxis, Aisthesis: Remarks on Aristotle and Marx
Henry Pickford, Duke University, USA
Chapter 3: "Sensuous Supra-Sensuous": The Aesthetics of Real Abstraction
Sami Khatib, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Chapter 4: Free Associations: On Marx and Freud
Johan F. Hartle, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Section II: Style and Performativity in Marx
Chapter 5: On Beauty and its Challenges: Friedrich Theodor Vischer and Karl Marx
Anna Katharina Gisbertz, University of Mannheim, Germany
Chapter 6: Marx: The Philosophical Defense of History in the Metonymical Mode
Hayden White, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Chapter 7: Imagery as Weaponry: ars gratia belli
Terrell Carver, University of Bristol, UK
Chapter 8: Radical Schiller and Young Marx
Daniel Hartley, University of Leeds, UK
Section III: Modes of Artistic Production
Chapter 9: Installing Communism
Boris Groys, New York University, USA
Chapter 10: Marx's Aesthetics in Mexico: Conceptual Art After 1968
Robin Greeley, University of Connecticut, USA
Chapter 11: Filming Capital: On Cinemarxism in the Twenty-first Century
Sven Lütticken, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Chapter 12: Marx as Art as Politics: Representations of Marx in Contemporary Arts
Johan H. Hartle, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
List of Illustrations
Recenzii
This volume offers many promising lines of inquiry whose practical and theoretical elaborations represent an exciting possibility for future research.
The crisis of neoliberal capitalism has occasioned an urgent and widespread reassessment of Marx and his significance. Anyone seeking to take its pulse in the discourses of the aesthetic must read Aesthetic Marx.
Gandesha and Hartle's vividly choreographed collection of essays succeeds in giving a new sense to Marx. It shows how the familiar scenes of dialectic, class consciousness and self-consciousness play out on a wider stage of passion, affect and sensibility. This invitation to revisit the texts of Marx and be astonished anew by their beauty and complexity is not to be missed.
A vibrant and inspired collection of essays, Aesthetic Marx prompts us to re-imagine the work of Marx as well as our long-standing understanding of aesthetics. Gandesha and Hartle's expansive introduction offers an invaluable and detailed overview of the fundamentally aesthetic character of Marx's thought, arguing in the process for a new vision of the operations of Marx's emancipatory critique. Essential reading for artists, critics and theorists who want to better understand why Marx's ideas remain at the heart of our political and aesthetic imaginaries in the twenty-first century.
The collection also includes essays on specific examples of aesthetics in Marxist political practice, for example the aesthetics of the communist world, the aesthetics of conceptual art in post-1968 Mexico, Marxist aesthetics in cinema, and the aesthetics of images of Marx. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.
The crisis of neoliberal capitalism has occasioned an urgent and widespread reassessment of Marx and his significance. Anyone seeking to take its pulse in the discourses of the aesthetic must read Aesthetic Marx.
Gandesha and Hartle's vividly choreographed collection of essays succeeds in giving a new sense to Marx. It shows how the familiar scenes of dialectic, class consciousness and self-consciousness play out on a wider stage of passion, affect and sensibility. This invitation to revisit the texts of Marx and be astonished anew by their beauty and complexity is not to be missed.
A vibrant and inspired collection of essays, Aesthetic Marx prompts us to re-imagine the work of Marx as well as our long-standing understanding of aesthetics. Gandesha and Hartle's expansive introduction offers an invaluable and detailed overview of the fundamentally aesthetic character of Marx's thought, arguing in the process for a new vision of the operations of Marx's emancipatory critique. Essential reading for artists, critics and theorists who want to better understand why Marx's ideas remain at the heart of our political and aesthetic imaginaries in the twenty-first century.
The collection also includes essays on specific examples of aesthetics in Marxist political practice, for example the aesthetics of the communist world, the aesthetics of conceptual art in post-1968 Mexico, Marxist aesthetics in cinema, and the aesthetics of images of Marx. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.