Switch to: References

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. Dam(n)med Bodies: Disorderly Subjectivity and Sublime Experience in the Narmada Movement.Tanay Gandhi - 2024 - Journal of Social and Political Philosophy 3 (1):52-66.
    This paper explores moments of democratising disorderliness that interrupt a vision of the sublime as a particular ordering of subjectivity. Situated within the context of the Narmada movement against the construction of the Sardar Sarovar Dam in India in the mid-1990s, it argues that sublime regimes and ‘counter-sublime’ insurgences draw their energies from the figures of the dam and the bund, respectively. Where the dam’s walls establish the horizons of visibility, of who counts as subject, the bund’s curved surfaces reveal (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Dominus Mundi: political sublime and the world order: by Pier Giuseppe Monateri, Oxford, Hart, 2018, 208 pp., £45.00 (hbk), ISBN: 9781509911752. [REVIEW]Guilherme Vasconcelos Vilaça - 2020 - Jurisprudence 11 (3):493-502.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Art, Politics and Rancière: Broken Perceptions.Scott Robinson - 2018 - Critical Horizons 19 (3):264-269.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • ‘A schematism of analogy with which we cannot dispense’. Kant on indirect representation in politics.Donald Loose - 2013 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 74 (2):90-107.
    In this article the importance of the representational character of politics is illustrated on the basis of the philosophy of Kant. The vanishing of the noumenal in post-modern thinking seems to imply fundamental changes in the sensitive response – aesthetics of the beautiful and the sublime – to politics. In the Kantian paradigm the meaning of our affective response to the violence of (human) nature is ruled by a moral perspective of practical reason. Although the representation of practical reason in (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Dark play: Aesthetic resistance in Lukács, Benjamin and Adorno.Surti Singh - 2020 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 46 (10):1182-1202.
    This article examines the turn to the aesthetic dimension in early 20th century critical theory, particularly in the work of Lukács, Benjamin and Adorno. It focuses on the concept of play, which garnered particular attention as a possible form of aesthetic resistance to the reification of reason in modern society. The article traces the concept of play from the work of Lukács, who engaged with Schiller’s notion of the play-drive but ultimately viewed it to be an inadequate form of aesthetic (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations