by Gerhard Richter (Author)
Gerhard Richter's groundbreaking study argues that the concept of afterness is a key figure in the thought and aesthetics of modernity. It pursues questions such as: What does it mean for something to follow something else? Does that which follows mark a clear break with what came before it, or does it in fact tacitly perpetuate its predecessor as a consequence of its inevitable indebtedness to the terms and conditions of that from which it claims to have departed? Indeed, is not the very act of breaking with, and then following upon, a way of retroactively constructing and fortifying that from which the break that set the movement of following into motion had occurred? The book explores the concept and movement of afterness as a privileged yet uncanny category through close readings of writers such as Kant, Kafka, Heidegger, Bloch, Benjamin, Brecht, Adorno, Arendt, Lyotard, and Derrida. It shows how the vexed concepts of afterness, following, and coming after shed new light on a constellation of modern preoccupations, including personal and cultural memory, translation, photography, hope, and the historical and conceptual specificity of what has been termed after Auschwitz. The study's various analyses--across a heterogeneous collection of modern writers and thinkers, diverse historical moments of articulation, and a range of media--conspire to illuminate Lyotard's apodictic statement that after philosophy comes philosophy. But it has been altered by the 'after.' As Richter's intricate study demonstrates, much hinges on our interpretation of the after. After all, our most fundamental assumptions concerning modern aesthetic representation, conceptual discourse, community, subjectivity, and politics are at stake.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Published: 28 Oct 2011
ISBN 10: 0231157703
ISBN 13: 9780231157704
Book Overview: Time plays a central role within philosophical and literary encounters with modernity. Once time is no longer thought of in terms of linear progression and is therefore free from the burdens of historicism, what endures as the central demand is thinking the 'after.' In a remarkably nuanced and original work, Gerhard Richter addresses the multifaceted nature of the 'after.' While canonical figures such as Walter Benjamin, Heidegger, Adorno, Derrida, and Arendt form the figures around whom the argument is developed, what emerges is Richter's original contribution to an understanding of time within modernity. In working at the interface of philosophy and aesthetics--a site that modernity demands and rightly privileges--Richter develops a conception of time that stills the pathos of utopianism while holding the future open. The possibility of another beginning resides in the recognition that what occurs 'after' is already taking place. -- Andrew Benjamin, professor of critical theory and philosophical aesthetics, Monash University