An interpretation of Walter Benjamin's ""oeuvre"", focusing on the central ideas of mourning and melancholia. Through close readings of his work, Pensky demonstrates that Benjamin's attempt to work through these ""melancholy dialectics"" lies at the core of his mature thought.
Perspectives Critiques sur la Culture Moderne Séries
Cette série rend accessibles au grand public des œuvres originales d'histoire culturelle et de critique contemporaine. Elle franchit les frontières disciplinaires établies, offrant de nouvelles perspectives sur la culture moderne. L'ensemble explore des aspects complexes et propose des analyses pertinentes qui enrichissent notre compréhension du monde contemporain.




Written from a non-Western point of view, this work offers a fresh perspective on the postcommunist literary scene. The four sections of the book - literature, ideology, culture and methodology - reflect the range of postmodernism in contemporary Russia.
Labyrinths
- 328pages
- 12 heures de lecture
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Toward a Genealogy of Individualism
- 168pages
- 6 heures de lecture
This engaging interdisciplinary study examines the emergence, rise, and decline of individualism as a central feature of the Western world view. Building on research into the concept of self, Daniel Shanahan argues that the seeds of individualism - "that system of beliefs in which the individual becomes the final arbiter of truth" - were sown in ancient civilizations where subjective consciousness first became apparent. He then traces the evolution of the Western self-concept through its various historical the "analog self" of the Greeks and Hebrews; the "authorized self" of Augustine and the Christian era; and the "empowered self" of modernity.In Shanahan's view, the current collapse of individualism reflects growing skepticism about the capacity of the self alone to determine truth. These doubts can be attributed in part to the inherent tensions of a self-referential epistemology and in part to the increasing alienation of the individual from modern society.In a final chapter, Shanahan draws on cross-cultural and anthropological studies of non-Western cultures to show that alternatives to the individualistic paradigm not only exist, but may already signal the advent of a new world view based on the recognition of human interdependence.