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Giorgio Agamben

Personal Information

Born April 22, 1942 (83 years old)
Rome, Italy
Also known as: GIORGIO AGAMBEN
29 books
4.0 (10)
130 readers

Description

Italian philosopher

Books

Newest First

Essays

Jeremy Collier, Umberto Eco, H. I. D. Ryder, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Walter Kasper, Béla Bartók, Clement Mansfield Ingleby, John Fiske, John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton, Jean-Luc Nancy, Michael Pye, Octavio Paz, Sayyid Aḥmad K̲h̲ān̲, Joseph Addison, Algirdas Julien Greimas, Евгений Иванович Замятин, Henry F. (Henry Francis) Pelham, Arthur Christopher Benson, Grant, Percy Stickney, Charles Carroll Everett, Jean François Lyotard, Herbert Spencer, Raymond Williams, William Hazlitt, Giorgio Agamben, Alfred Kerr, Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Blok, William Butler Yeats, William Graham Sumner, Allen Tate, James Beattie, J. H. Plumb, William Godwin, Francis Bacon, Henry David Thoreau, Henry Thomas Buckle, Arthur Schopenhauer, Herman Friedrich Grimm, John Addington Symonds, James Hadley, James Laughlin, Joseph Isaac Schneersohn, Irving Howe, E. M. W. Tillyard, Benjamin Rush, Plutarch, Morton Feldman, Simone Weil, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Howard Zinn, Ellen Key, Salisbury, Robert Cecil marquess of, J. Logie Robertson, Oliver Goldsmith, Thomas Henry Huxley, Arnold Zweig, Hugh Miller, Mackenzie, Morell Sir, George Orwell, Bing Xin, Roland Barthes, Errico Malatesta, George John Romanes, Parsons, Theophilus, Alice Meynell, Alejo Carpentier, Charles Baudelaire, Jacques Barzun, James Huneker, Thomas Paine, Thomas Merton, Jean-Paul Sartre, Montaigne, Michel de, David Hume, Paul Valéry, Félix Guattari, Wilhelm Max Wundt, Christopher Hill, Shen, Congwen, Italo Calvino, Robert Morgan, James Martineau, Abūlkalām Āzād, Friedrich Schiller, Rosemond Tuve, René Descartes, Immanuel Kant, Joseph Alois Schumpeter, Carl Gustav Jung, John Henry Newman, Thomas De Quincey, Virginia Woolf, Matthew Arnold, Frederic William Henry Myers, Ernst Troeltsch, Martin Buber, Hermann Bahr, Thomas Mann, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, Jonathan Franzen, Samuel Johnson, Anscombe, G. E. M., Charles Lamb, George Brimley, John Abercrombie, Thomas Monro, Hubert Bland
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Cy Twombly

5.0 (1)
37

Twombly's photographic oeuvre, which did not achieve recognition until late, spans more than sixty years of his career. In this catalogue around a hundred unpublished photographs selected,(just before his death), by the artist himself, he also did the book design. The photographs are accompanied by an essay written by Hubertus V. Amelunxen.00Exhibition: Paleis voor Schone Kunsten, Brussels. February/April 2012.

Migropolis

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In winter 2006, under the aegis of philosopher Wolfgang Scheppe, a collective of students from the IUAV University in Venice fanned out to subject their city to a process of forensic structural mapping. Out of this field work, conducted in the Situationist tradition, there developed a three-year urban project that produced an enormous archive comprising tens of thousands of photographs, case studies, movement profiles, and statistic data. Exhibition: Bevilacqua La Masa, Venice, October 8 - December 8, 2009.

The Highest Poverty Monastic Rules And Formoflife

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4

What is a rule, if it appears to become confused with life? And what is a human life, if, in every one of its gestures, of its words, and of its silences, it cannot be distinguished from the rule? It is to these questions that Agamben's new book turns by means of an impassioned reading of the fascinating and massive phenomenon of Western monasticism from Pachomius to St. Francis. The book reconstructs in detail the life of the monks with their obsessive attention to temporal articulation and to the Rule, to ascetic techniques and to liturgy. But Agamben's thesis is that the true novelty of monasticism lies not in the confusion between life and norm, but in the discovery of a new dimension, in which "life" as such, perhaps for the first time, is affirmed in its autonomy, and in which the claim of the "highest poverty" and "use" challenges the law in ways that we must still grapple with today.

Il Regno e la gloria

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Die genealogische Erforschung der Macht, die Giorgio Agamben 1995 mit Homo sacer begonnen hat, nimmt mit diesem Buch eine entscheidende Wendung: Warum hat in der westlichen Welt die Macht die Form der Ökonomie angenommen? Und: Weshalb bedarf sie der Herrlichkeit, also jenes liturgisch-zeremoniellen Aufwands, der seit jeher um sie betrieben wird? Um den Monotheismus mit den »drei Personen« zu vereinbaren, entwarfen die Kirchenväter die Trinitätslehre als »Ökonomie« des göttlichen Lebens: als eine Frage der Führung und Verwaltung sowohl des himmlischen als auch des irdischen »Hauses« (griech.: oikía). Agamben zeigt, daß grundlegende Kategorien der modernen Politik – von der Gewaltenteilung bis zur militärischen Doktrin des Kollateralschadens, vom Liberalismus der »unsichtbaren Hand« bis zum Ordnungs- und Sicherheitsdenken – auf dieses theologisch-ökonomische Paradigma zurückgeführt werden können. Die zeremoniellen Aspekte der Macht sind nicht bloß Überreste vergangener Zeiten, sondern bilden – noch immer – ihr Fundament: eine bislang übersehene Genealogie, die die Funktion des Konsenses und der Medien in den modernen Demokratien in einem neuen Licht erscheinen läßt. (Quelle: [Suhrkamp Verlag](

The end of the poem

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This book, by one of Italy's most important and original contemporary philosophers, represents a broad, general, and ambitious undertaking - nothing less than an attempt to rethink the nature of poetic language and to rearticulate relationships among theology, poetry, and philosophy in a tradition of literature initiated by Dante. The book opens with a discussion of just how Dante's poem is a "comedy," and it concludes with a discussion of the "ends of poetry" in a variety of senses: enjambment at the ends of lines, the concluding lines of poems, and the end of poetry as a mode of writing this sort of literature. Of course, to have poetry "end" does not mean that people stop writing it, but that literature passes into a period in which it is concerned with its own ending, with its own bounds and limits, historical and otherwise. Though most of the essays make specific reference to various authors of the Italian literary tradition (including Dante, Polifilo, Pascoli, Delfini, and Caproni), they transcend the confines of Italian literature and engage several other literary and philosophical authors (Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Boethius, the Provencal poets, Mallarme, and Holderlin, among others).

Potentialities

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"This book, which collects fifteen essays in philosophy written over a period of more than twenty years, constitutes the largest and most significant collection of writings by the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben to be published in any language.". "The volume opens with an introduction in which the editor situates Agamben's work with respect to both the history of philosophy and contemporary European thought. The essays that follow articulate a series of theoretical confrontations with privileged figures in the history of philosophy, politics, and criticism, from Plato to Spinoza, Aristotle to Deleuze, Carl Schmitt to Benjamin, Hegel to Aby Warburg, and Heidegger to Derrida."--BOOK JACKET.

The kingdom and the glory

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CONTENT: The two paradigms -- The mystery of the economy -- Being and acting -- The kingdom and the government -- The providential machine -- Archaeology and bureaucracy -- The power and the glory -- The archaeology of glory -- Appendix : The economy of the moderns -- The law and the miracle -- The invisible hand.

The Man Without Content (Meridian: Crossing Aesthetics)

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4

In this book, one of Italy's most important and original contemporary philosophers considers the status of art in the modern era. He takes seriously Hegel's claim that art has exhausted its spiritual vocation, that it is no longer through art that Spirit principally comes to knowledge of itself. He argues, however, that Hegel by no means proclaimed the "death of art" (as many still imagine) but proclaimed rather the indefinite continuation of art in what Hegel called a "self-annulling" mode.