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Adorno and Philosophical Modernism Roger S. Foster

Adorno and Philosophical Modernism By Roger S. Foster

Adorno and Philosophical Modernism by Roger S. Foster


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Summary

This book explores contemporary continental philosophy and aesthetics. It addresses the problem of post-Kantian reason in relation to the pathologies of experience, alienation, the transformative and ethical import of aesthetic experience, the relation between philosophy and social critique, and language as disclosure rather than correspondence.

Adorno and Philosophical Modernism Summary

Adorno and Philosophical Modernism: The Inside of Things by Roger S. Foster

Adorno and Philosophical Modernism: The Inside of Things offers an original interpretation and vigorous defense of Theodor Adorno's idea of philosophy as the practice of what Roger Foster calls philosophical modernism. Adorno's philosophical writings, from the early 1930s to the mature works of the late 1960s, are deeply informed by a distinctively modernist vision of human experience. This book seeks to establish that Adorno's unique and lasting contribution to philosophy consists in his sustained and rigorous development of this modernist vision into an encompassing practice of philosophical interpretation. The essential features of this vision can be discerned in all of Adorno's major writings in philosophy, social theory, and aesthetics. Its defining element is the idea of a pattern underlying ordinary experience, which, although not directly accessible, can be disclosed by the reconstructive work of philosophical or literary language. This vision, Foster argues, can be discerned in the major works of literary modernism (including Woolf, Proust, and Musil) as well as in the interpretive technique of psychoanalysis developed by Sigmund Freud. The importance of Adorno's contribution to twentieth-century philosophy can only be fully appreciated by understanding how he developed this vision into an overarching practice of philosophical interpretation that furnished a coherent and profound response to the decay of experience afflicting late-modern societies. In this book, Foster expounds that interpretive practice, exploring its ramifications and, in particular, its relation with literary modernism, and places it in critical dialogue with alternative philosophical responses.

Adorno and Philosophical Modernism Reviews

In many respects, Foster's study can be seen as a sequel or companion volume to his important Adorno: The Recovery of Experience (CH, Jun'08, 45-5498). Whereas that book focused on the philosophical context of Adorno's work, this study embraces a culturally broader view of what Foster (Borough of Manhattan Community College, CUNY) terms philosophical modernism. Foster expands this discussion to consider literary modernism, focusing on such figures as Yves Bonnefoy, Robert Musil, and Virginia Woolf. The book as a whole, however, is carefully grounded in Adorno's philosophy. Indeed, the author has mined the full corpus of Adorno's work for this project, even incorporating detailed discussion of Adorno's engagement with Heidegger. Foster argues that, for Adorno, the means-be they philosophy, literature, or language itself-to come to terms with experience in the context of modernism are no longer adequate to the task. As a result, the only meaningful response is a philosophy (or literature) that embraces an interpretive practice that seeks to account for this very inadequacy. This is a rewarding study that does justice to its challenging subject. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. * CHOICE *
Roger Foster has written an ambitious, timely, unique, and useful book on the work of German thinker Theodor W. Adorno.... [M]y aim-as Foster's book also aims and accomplishes-is to highlight the continuing relevance of Adorno's work for our present moment and, indeed, for the history of philosophy from Kant onward; this book is a welcome addition to that undertaking. * The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism *
In complex yet stimulating and often path-breaking readings of Adorno's philosophy, and with breathtaking accounts of such writers as Bonnefoy, Musil, and Woolf, Foster addresses the late modern condition from the vantage-point of experience. As our lifeworld gets increasingly commodified, digitalized and instrumentalized, the need for a reconsideration of what authentic experience demands has never seemed more timely. For readers interested in the intersection between philosophy, literature and the question of modernity, this book is bound to be a unique resource. -- Espen Hammer, Temple University

About Roger S. Foster

Roger Foster teaches philosophy at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, CUNY.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Why Adorno, Today? Chapter 1: Philosophical Modernism Chapter 2: Adorno and Heidegger on Language and the Inexpressible Chapter 3: Philosophy in the Open Chapter 4: Language and Aesthetic Experience Chapter 5: The Internal History of Truth Chapter 6: Modernist Ethics: Musil, Wittgenstein, and Adorno Chapter 7: Virginia Woolf: Literature and Aesthetic Experience Conclusion: Modernist Criticism Bibliography

Additional information

NLS9781498525022
9781498525022
1498525024
Adorno and Philosophical Modernism: The Inside of Things by Roger S. Foster
New
Paperback
Lexington Books
2018-06-01
270
N/A
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