Baroque Naturalism in Benjamin and Deleuze

Baroque Naturalism in Benjamin and Deleuze The Art of Least Distances

Hardback (19 Oct 2021)

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Publisher's Synopsis

​This book, itself a study of two books on the Baroque, proposes a pair of related theses: one interpretive, the other argumentative. The first, enveloped in the second, holds that the significance of allegory Gilles Deleuze recognized in Walter Benjamin's 1928 monograph on seventeenth century drama is itself attested in key aspects of Kantian, Leibnizian, and Platonic philosophy (to wit, in the respective forms by which thought is phrased, predicated, and proposed).The second, enveloping the first, is a literalist claim about predication itself - namely, that the aesthetics of agitation and hallucination so emblematic of the Baroque sensibility (as attested in its emblem-books) adduces an avowedly metaphysical 'naturalism' in which thought is replete with predicates. Oriented by Barbara Cassin's development of the concerted sense in which homonyms are critically distinct from synonyms, the philosophical claim here is that 'the Baroque' names the intervallic [διαστηµατική] relation that thought establishes between things. On this account, any subject finds its unity in a concerted state of disquiet - a state-rempli in which, phenomenologically speaking, experience comprises as much seeing as reading (as St Jerome encountering Origen's Hexapla).

Book information

ISBN: 9783030663971
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan
Pub date:
DEWEY: 190
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 123
Weight: 565g
Height: 210mm
Width: 148mm
Spine width: 22mm