Proposes "the extraordinary" as a defining characteristic of modernity.
Translated from the Spanish De lo extraordinario: Nominalismo y Modernidad, this book argues that a defining aspect of modernity is an ever-increasing pursuit of, and need for, what Eduardo Sabrovsky calls “the extraordinary,” a term that encompasses both the exception and the miraculous. Sabrovsky shows the degree to which Robert Musil’s novel The Man without Qualities functions as a paradoxical paradigm of the extraordinary, and he extends the theoretical insights drawn from Musil’s magisterial work through a series of inquiries into cardinal elements of modern literature, material culture, historiography, physical science, psychoanalysis, and political theory. Sabrovsky demonstrates how the extraordinary condition of modernity emerges from the debates conducted by the last representatives of medieval scholasticism in which nominalism defeated realism, and he resituates the results of this triumph of nominalism in the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche, Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, and Georges Bataille, among others.
Author(s): Eduardo Sabrovsky
Series: (SUNY series, Intersections: Philosophy and Critical Theory)
Publisher: SUNY Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 220
Tags: Modernism, Modernity
Contents
Preface to the English Edition
Preface to the Spanish Edition
Introduction: From the Transcendental, through the Extraordinary, to “Perpetual Peace”
1 Musil’s Death
The Utopia of Exact Living
2 The Extraordinary, History
3 The Extraordinary, Myth
4 The Works of Science
5 Nietzsche: The Incombustible in Reason
6 The Truth Is That There Is No Truth
7 The Endless Sacrifice: Art and the Production of the Extraordinary
Postscript: The Origin of the World
8 Outline for an Ethics of Immortality
9 Politics of Space and of the Gaze
Introduction: To Suffer for the City
Device I: The Spectacle
Device II: The Panoptic
Device III: The Black Box and the Coffin
Postscript: I’m a Loos-er
10 Notes on the Spectrality of Objects
Postscript: How Easy It Would Be Not to Think of a Tiger!
11 Psychoanalysis: The Future of an Illusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index