Baroque Reason: The Aesthetics of Modernity

SAGE Publications (1994)
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Abstract

In this fascinating book, Christine Buci-Glucksmann explores the condition of modernity - alienation, melancholy, nostalgia - through the works of a number of writers and philosophers, including the social and aesthetic philosophy of Walter Benjamin. The author examines Baudelaire's haunting image of the city and its profound effect on conceptions of modernity. She goes on to consider how such influential figures as Nietzsche, Adorno, Musil, Barthes and Lacan constitute a baroque paradigm, united by their allegorical style, their conflation of aesthetics with ethics and their subject matter - death, catastrophe, sexuality, myth, the female. In her exegesis of these fundamental themes Buci-Glucksmann proposes an epistemology.

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Citations of this work

Cosmopolitan Virtue: On Religion in a Global Age.Bryan S. Turner - 2001 - European Journal of Social Theory 4 (2):131-152.
'A demented form of the familiar': Postmodernism and educational research.Maggie Maclure - 2006 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 40 (2):223–239.
The Labyrinth of COVID-19.Susan Visvanathan - 2021 - Paragrana: Internationale Zeitschrift für Historische Anthropologie 30 (2):78-87.

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