Adorno’s Philosophy of the Nonidentical: Thinking as Resistance

Cham: Springer Verlag (2018)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

This book focuses on a central notion in Theodor. W. Adorno’s philosophy: the nonidentical. The nonidentical is what our conceptual framework cannot grasp and must therefore silence, the unexpressed other of our rational engagement with the world. This study presents the nonidentical as the multidimensional centerpiece of Adorno’s reflections on subjectivity, truth, suffering, history, art, morality and politics, revealing the intimate relationship between how and what we think. Adorno’s work, written in the shadow of Auschwitz, is a quest for a different way of thinking, one that would give the nonidentical a voice – as the somatic in reasoning, the ephemeral in truth, the aesthetic in cognition, the other in society. Adorno’s philosophy of the nonidentical reveals itself not only as a powerful hermeneutics of the past, but also as an important tool for the understanding of modern phenomena such as xenophobia, populism, political polarization, identity politics, and systemic racism.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,532

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Chapters

Epilogue

The epilogue looks back at the picture of the nonidentical that emerges from this book, and at what connects the different dimensions of this rich notion. Reflecting on Adorno’s quest for transcendence and on his abhorrence of analytic thought that cuts it off, it paints the gesture of the nonidenti... see more

Philosophy of Art, Art of Philosophy: Adorno’s Aesthetic Utopia

This chapter explores Adorno’s aesthetic theory. It looks at his claim that “writing a poem after Auschwitz is barbaric” in its relationship to art’s fragile, double-edged autonomy, and examines his theory of mimesis—a non-conceptual affinity between subject and object that, expelled by identity thi... see more

The Torturable Body: Adorno’s Negative Dialectic

This chapter, centered on Negative Dialectic, explores the paramount role of suffering in Adorno’s notion of the nonidentical—the suffering of the torturable body, and as its historical paroxysm, the suffering of the victims of the Shoah. A look at Adorno’s reading of Aristotle shows that for Adorno... see more

The Fate of the Nonidentical: Auschwitz and the Dialectic of Enlightenment

This chapter retraces the development of the notion of nonidentical in Adorno’s early work. Dialectic of Enlightenment relates how enlightened reason, in its effort to overcome myth, disqualified everything that did not meet its newly enthroned criteria of verifiability, univocity, non-contradiction... see more

Introduction

Adorno’s philosophy of the nonidentical grows out of the tension at the heart of rational thought: between the subject’s need to identify and conceptualize, and the object’s own objectivity, the nonidentical that is erased in a thought cut to fit. Our conceptual framework makes us all “identity thin... see more

Similar books and articles

Reification and the nonidentical. On the problem of nature in Lukács and Adorno.Steven Vogel - 1996 - In Lenore Langsdorf, Stephen Watson, Bower H. & E. Marya (eds.), Phenomenology, Interpretation and Community. State University of New York Press.
Minima Pedagogica: Education, Thinking and Experience in Adorno.Snir Itay - 2017 - Journal of Philosophy of Education (1):1-15.
Kant’s ‘Critique of Pure Reason’.Rolf Tiedemann & Rodney Livingstone (eds.) - 2001 - Stanford University Press.
3. The ‘Aesthetic Dignity of Words’: Adorno’s Philosophy of Language.Samir Gandesha - 2007 - In Donald Burke, Colin J. Campbell, Kathy Kiloh, Michael Palamarek & Jonathan Short (eds.), Adorno and the Need in Thinking: New Critical Essays. University of Toronto Press. pp. 78-102.
Adorno and Schelling: How to ‘Turn Philosophical Thought Towards the Non-Identical’.Franck Fischbach - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (6):1167-1179.
Benjamin and Adorno on Critical Theory and Redemption.Leopard Zeng - 2001 - Philosophy and Culture 28 (12):1109-1128.
14. ‘On the Morality of Thinking,’ or Why Still Adorno.Asha Varadharajan - 2007 - In Donald Burke, Colin J. Campbell, Kathy Kiloh, Michael Palamarek & Jonathan Short (eds.), Adorno and the Need in Thinking: New Critical Essays. University of Toronto Press. pp. 316-342.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-02-01

Downloads
3 (#1,706,065)

6 months
1 (#1,470,413)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Oshrat Silberbusch
Tel Aviv University

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references