The Fate of Art: Aesthetic Alienation from Kant to Derrida and Adorno

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Penn State Press, 1992 - Philosophy - 292 pages

Aesthetic alienation may be described as the paradoxical relationship whereby art and truth have come to be divorced from one another while nonetheless remaining entwined. J. M. Bernstein not only finds the separation of art and truth problematic, but also contends that we continue to experience art as sensuous and particular, thus complicating and challenging the cultural self-understanding of modernity.

Bernstein focuses on the work of four key philosophers--Kant, Heidegger, Derrida, and Adorno--and provides powerful new interpretations of their views. Bernstein shows how each of the three post-Kantian aesthetics (its concepts of judgment, genius, and the sublime) to construct a philosophical language that can criticize and displace the categorical assumption of modernity. He also examines in detail their responses to questions concerning the relations among art, philosophy, and politics in modern societies.

 

Contents

Beauty and the Labour of Mourning
55
Indeterminacy and Metaphysics Anticipating
63
Derridas The Truth in Painting
136
Adornos Aesthetic
188
Disintegration and Speculation
225
72
234
Notes
275
2280
279
Index
289
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About the author (1992)

J. M. Bernstein is University Distinguished Professor in Philosophy at the New School for Social Research. He is the author of The Philosophy of the Novel: Lukacs, Marxism, and the Dialectics of Form (1984).

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