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Theodor W, Adorno II [Multiple-component retail product]

Edited by (Temple University, USA)
  • Formāts: Multiple-component retail product, 856 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 1790 g, Contains 2 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Oct-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138886696
  • ISBN-13: 9781138886698
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  • Multiple-component retail product
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  • Formāts: Multiple-component retail product, 856 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 1790 g, Contains 2 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Oct-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138886696
  • ISBN-13: 9781138886698
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

A new title in Routledge’s Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers series, this is a two-volume collection of the very best recent scholarship on Theodor W. Adorno (1903–69). It is an essential successor to an earlier four-volume collection,Theodor Adorno (Critical Evaluations in Cultural Theory) (978-0-415-30464-1), edited by Simon Jarvis and published by Routledge in 2006.

Recent decades have seen a remarkable growth of scholarly studies devoted to Theodor W. Adorno’s philosophy and social theory. Every year, conferences and publications all over the world testify to a lively interest. Indeed, since his death in 1969, Adorno has been read and discussed not only by philosophers but by researchers in all areas of the theoretical humanities, and his impact has been considerable both inside and outside the academy. This new Routledge collection brings together the very best of recent research on Adorno. The editor has particularly focused on works that take account of contemporary developments in philosophy and social theory, demonstrating how Adorno’s view may engage with contemporary theoretical concerns.

With a full index, together with a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context,Theodor W. Adorno II is an indispensable work of reference. It is destined to be valued by scholars, students, and researchers as a vital research resource.

VOLUME I
Acknowledgements xi
Chronological table of reprinted articles and chapters xiii
Introduction 1(1)
PART 1 Epistemology
19(96)
1 Contradiction as truth-content: Adorno and Kant
21(17)
Andrew Bowie
2 Adorno and Heidegger on language and the inexpressible
38(19)
Roger Foster
3 Reflective rationality and the claim of Dialectic of Enlightenment
57(30)
Pierre-Francois Noppen
4 Arendt and Adorno: the elusiveness of the particular and the Benjaminian moment
87(28)
Seyla Benhabib
PART 2 Metaphysics
115(102)
5 Metaphysical experience and constitutive error in Adorno's "Meditations on Metaphysics"
117(22)
Christian Skirke
6 Inverse theology: Bilderverbot and the illumination of non-identity
139(29)
Christopher Craig Brittain
7 Adorno and the disenchantment of nature
168(21)
Alison Stone
8 Adorno on Kant, freedom and determinism
189(28)
Timo Jutten
PART 3 Dialectics
217(110)
9 Adorno's negative dialectic as a form of life: expression, suffering, and freedom
219(62)
Martin Shuster
10 Two dialectics of enlightenment
281(20)
William Maker
11 Adorno, Hegel and the concrete universal
301(26)
Charlotte Baumann
PART 4 Ethics
327
12 An ethics of resistance
329(23)
Fabian Freyenhagen
13 Do our actions make any difference in the wrong life? Adorno on moral facts and moral dilemmas
352(20)
Christian Skirke
14 Can one lead a good life in a bad life? Adorno Prize Lecture
372(16)
Judith Butler
15 Cold, cold, warm: autonomy, intimacy and maturity in Adorno
388(24)
Iain Macdonald
16 `The zone of the carcass and the knacker': on Adorno's concern with the suffering body
412
Mathijs Peters
VOLUME II
Acknowledgements vii
PART 5 Politics
1(114)
17 Adorno and radical ecology
3(36)
Deborah Cook
18 Genealogies of total domination: Arendt, Adorno, and Auschwitz
39(41)
Dana Villa
19 Democratic darkness and Adorno's redemptive criticism
80(20)
Andrew J. Douglas
20 Taking on the stigma of inauthenticity: Adorno's critique of genuineness
100(15)
Martin Jay
PART 6 Aesthetics
115(146)
21 The death of sensuous particulars: T. J. Clark and abstract expressionism
117(19)
Jay M. Bernstein
22 The ephemeral and the absolute: the truth content of art
136(20)
Peter Uwe Hohendahl
23 Art and criticism in Adorno's aesthetics
156(22)
Raymond Geuss
24 Dialectical aesthetics and the Kantian Rettung: on Adorno's Aesthetic Theory
178(14)
Ross Wilson
25 Philosophical exercises in repetition: on music, humor, and exile in Wittgenstein and Adorno
192(26)
Lydia Goehr
26 The artwork and the promesse du bonheur in Adorno
218(29)
James Gordon Finlayson
27 Returning to the `house of oblivion': Celan between Adorno and Heidegger
247(14)
Iain Macdonald
PART 7 Social theory
261(150)
28 Adorno on the radio: democratic leadership as democratic pedagogy
263(26)
Shannon L. Mariotti
29 Conscience collective or false consciousness? Adorno's critique of Durkheim's sociology of morals
289(23)
Tobias Garde Hagens
30 A physiognomy of the capitalist form of life: a sketch of Adorno's social theory
312(16)
Axel Honneth
31 Sociological reflection
328(37)
Matthias Benzer
32 Nazism and negative dialectics: Adorno's Hitler in Minima Moralia
365(46)
Gerhard Richter
Index 411