Badiou, Alain.

Handbook of inaesthetics /Alain Badiou ; translated by Alberto Toscano. - Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, (c)2005. - 1 online resource (xi, 148 pages). - Meridian .

Includes bibliographies and index.

Art and philosophy --- What is a poem?, Or, philosophy and poetry at the point of the unnamable --- A French philosopher responds to a Polish poet --- A philosophical task: to be contemporaries of Pessoa --- A poetic dialectic: Labîd ben Rabi'a and Mallarmeʹ --- Dance as a metaphor for thought --- Theses on theater --- The false movements of cinema --- Being, existence, thought: prose and concept --- Philosophy of the faun.

Didacticism, romanticism, and classicism are the possible schemata for the knotting of art and philosophy, the third term in this knot being the education of subjects, youth in particular. What characterizes the century that has just come to a close is that, while it underwent the saturation of these three schemata, it failed to introduce a new one. Today, this predicament tends to produce a kind of unknotting of terms, a desperate dis-relation between art and philosophy, together with the pure and simple collapse of what circulated between them: the theme of education. Whence the thesis of which this book is nothing but a series of variations: faced with such a situation of saturation and closure, we must attempt to propose a new schema, a fourth type of knot between philosophy and art. Among these "inaesthetic" variations, the reader will encounter a sustained debate with contemporary philosophical uses of the poem, bold articulations of the specificity and prospects of theater, cinema, and dance, along with subtle and provocative readings of Fernando Pessoa, Stephane Mallarme, and Samuel Beckett.



9781503601666


Philosophy-Ancient
Aesthetics.


Electronic Books.

B2430 / .H363 2005