Rancière’s Productive Contradictions

Symposium 15 (2):28-56 (2011)
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Abstract

This article explores the force and limitations of Jacques Rancière’s novel attempt to rethink the relationship between aesthetics and politics. In particular, it unravels the paradoxical threads of the fundamental contradiction between two of his steadfast claims: (1) art and politics are consubstantial, and (2) art and politics never truly merge. In taking Rancière to task on this point, the primary objective of this article is to work through the nuances of his project andforeground the problems inherent therein in order to break with the “talisman complex” and the “ontological illusion” of the politics of aesthetics in the name of a new understanding of the social politicity of artistic practices.

Other Versions

reprint Rockhill, Gabriel (2011) "Rancière’s Productive Contradictions". Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 15(2):28-56

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Gabriel Rockhill
Villanova University

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