Modernity Theory: Modern Experience, Modernist Consciousness, Reflexive Thinking

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Modernity theory approaches modern experience as it incorporates a sense of itself as ‘modern’ (modernity), along with the possibilities and limitations of representing this in the arts and culture generally (modernism). The book interrogates modernity in the name of a fluid, unsettled, unsettling modernism.

As the offspring of the Enlightenment and the Age of Sensibility, modernity is framed here through a cultural aesthetics that highlights not just an instrumental, exploitative approach to the world but the distinctive configuration of embodiment, feeling, and imagination, that we refer to as ‘civilization’, in turn both explored and subverted through modernist experimentalism and reflexive thinking in culture and the arts. This discloses the rationalizing pretensions that underlie the modern project and have resulted in the sensationalist, melodramatic conflicts of good and evil that traverse our contemporary world of politics and popular culture alike. This innovative approach permits modernity theory to link otherwise fragmented insights of separate humanities disciplines, aspects of sociology, and cultural studies, by identifying and contributing to a central strand of modern thought running from Kant through Benjamin to the present. One aspect of modernity theory that results is that it cannot escape the paradoxes inherent in reflexive involvement in its own history.


Author(s): John Jervis
Edition: 1st ed.
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Year: 2018

Language: English
Pages: VIII, 166
Tags: Literature, Literary Theory

Front Matter ....Pages i-viii
Introduction: Why Modernity Theory? (John Jervis)....Pages 1-9
Modernity and Modernism: Key Themes (John Jervis)....Pages 11-31
Reflexivity and the Project of Modernity (John Jervis)....Pages 33-51
Experience and Representation (John Jervis)....Pages 53-72
The Mediated World (John Jervis)....Pages 73-91
Modernity and Civilization (John Jervis)....Pages 93-115
The Nature of It All (Modernist Ontology) (John Jervis)....Pages 117-130
The Meaning of It All (Between Apocalypse and the Banal) (John Jervis)....Pages 131-147
Back Matter ....Pages 149-166