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The Association for Adorno Studies

The Association for Adorno Studies

Monthly Archives: April 2021

Book Launch-Speaking Politically: Adorno and Postcolonial Fiction, May 17, 2021

29 Thursday Apr 2021

Posted by Surti Singh in Critical Theory, Frankfurt School, Publications, Theodor W. Adorno

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Eleni Philippou (Oxford) has shared with us news of the upcoming book launch for her recently published monograph, Speaking Politically: Adorno and Postcolonial Fiction (Routledge).

Full Details on the launch are available here: https://www.occt.ox.ac.uk/discussion-group-book-launch-speaking-politically-adorno-and-postcolonial-fiction.


Eleni Philippou (Oxford)
Daniele Nunziata (Oxford)
Monday, May 17, 2021 – 13:00 to 14:00
Livestreamed via Microsoft Teams on 17 May

Join Dr Eleni Philippou in conversation with Dr Daniele Nunziata to discuss her monograph, Speaking Politically: Adorno and Postcolonial Fiction. In this monograph Theodor Adorno’s philosophy engages with postcolonial texts and authors that emerge out of situations of political extremity – apartheid South Africa, war-torn Sri Lanka, Pinochet’s dictatorship, and the Greek military junta. This book is ground-breaking in two key ways: first, it argues that Adorno can speak to texts with which he is not historically associated; and second, it uses Adorno’s theory to unlock the liberatory potential of authors or novels traditionally understood to be “apolitical”. While addressing Adorno’s uneven critical response and dissemination in the Anglophone literary world, the book also showcases Adorno’s unique reading of the literary text both in terms of its innate historical content and formal aesthetic attributes. Such a reading refuses to read postcolonial texts exclusively as political documents, a problematic (but changing) tendency within postcolonial studies. In short, the book operates as a two-way conversation asking: “What can Adorno’s concepts give to certain literary texts?” but also reciprocally, “What can those texts give to our conventional understanding of Adorno and his applicability?” This book is an act of rethinking the literary in Adornian terms, and rethinking Adorno through the literary.

The book can be purchased here: https://www.routledge.com/Speaking-Politically-Adorno-and-Postcolonial-Fiction/Philippou/p/book/9780367437930

Bios: Dr Eleni Philippou is currently a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at OCCT and the Principal Investigator of the Prismatic Jane Eyre Schools project. Beyond her key research interests in postcolonial and world literature, she is also interested in critical theory, comparative literature, and translation studies. She is an award-winning poet, with a number of poems published in both British and international anthologies and journals.

Dr Daniele Nunziata is a Lecturer in English Literature at St Anne’s College, University of Oxford. His research on postcolonial literature has been published in numerous journals (including PMLA and the Journal of Postcolonial Writing) and in the Columbia University Press series, Studies in World Literature. He is a contributor to Writers Make Worlds.

New Book: Ferrarese, The Fragility of Concern for Others

15 Thursday Apr 2021

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Adorno in Context, Critical Theory, Frankfurt School, Publications, Theodor W. Adorno

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Adorno, Critical Theory, Estelle Ferrarese, Ethics of Care, Frankfurt School

Estelle Ferrarese has informed us that her recent book on Adorno and care had been published in English translation (translator: Steven Corcoran) in January by Edinburgh University Press. The complete English title of her book is: The Fragility of Concern for Others: Adorno and the Ethics of Care (2021).

Here’s the flyer.

Here’s the description from the publisher’s page:

A systematic reflection on the social conditions of caring for others

  • Offers a feminist renewal of Adorno’s philosophy
  • Stages a conversation between two strands of theory that, despite the importance that they each grant to human vulnerability, have yet to enter into discussion: the Frankfurt School and the ethics of care
  • Sheds light on the difficulties and the lacuna of Adorno’s Critical Theory concerning patriarchy
  • Highlights the difficulty involved in determining the meaning of a moral act in the capitalist context
  • Brings the work of one of the leading figures of the contemporary French reception of Critical Theory to an English-language audience

Estelle Ferrarese, one of the leading figures of the contemporary French reception of Critical Theory, offers a renewal of the thinking of Theodor W. Adorno. Ferrarese develops our thinking about the social conditions of caring for others, while arguing for an understanding of morality that is materialist and political – always-already political.

Taking the social philosopher Adorno as a point of departure, Ferrarese questions this social philosophy by submitting it to ideas deriving from theories of care. She thinks through the mechanisms of the social fragility of caring for others, the moral gesture it enjoins, as well as its political stakes.

In the end, Ferrarese shows that the capitalist form of life, strained by a generalised indifference, produces a compartmentalised attention to others, one limited to very particular tasks and domains and attributed to women.

Annual Meeting Postponed until 2022

15 Thursday Apr 2021

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Association for Adorno Studies, Conference

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Annual Meeting

The annual meeting of the Association for Adorno Studies is postponed until the end of May 2022.

New Book: Global Economic Crisis as Social Hieroglyphic (Routledge)

02 Friday Apr 2021

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Critical Theory, Frankfurt School, Publications, Theodor W. Adorno

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Adorno, Economic Crisis, Frankfurt School, Horkheimer, Marcuse

Christos Memos has shared with us the news about the upcoming publication of his new book by Routledge. The full title of his book is: Global Economic Crisis as Social Hieroglyphic: Genesis, Constitution and Regressive Progress.

Here’s the flyer.

And here’s the publisher’s description.

Book Description

This book examines the 2008 global economic crisis as a complex social phenomenonor “social hieroglyphic”, arguing that the crisis is not fundamentally economic, despite presenting itself as such. Instead, it is considered to be a symptom of a long-standing, multifaceted, and endemic crisis of capitalism which has effectively become permanent, leading contemporary capitalist societies into a state of social regression, manifest in new forms of barbarism. The author offers a qualitative understanding of the economic crisis as the perversion, or inversion, of the capitalistically organized social relations. The genesis of the current crisis is traced back to the unresolved world crisis surrounding the Great Depression in order to map the course and different “inverted forms” of the continuous global crisis of capitalism, and to reveal their inner connections as derivative of the same social constitution. From a historical and interdisciplinary perspective, the book expounds critical social theory, elaborating on the intersection between the early critical theory of the Frankfurt School – mainly Adorno, Horkheimer, and Marcuse – and the “social form” analysis of the Open Marxism school. Global Economic Crisis as Social Hieroglyphic critically addresses the permanent character of the 1920s–1930s crisis and the “crisis theory” debates; the political crisis in Eastern Europe (1953–1968); the crisis of Keynesianism; the crisis of subversive reason; the crisis, negative anthropology and transformations of the bourgeois individual; the state of social regression and the destructive tendencies after the rise of neoliberalism; and finally, the 2008 financial crisis and its ongoing aftermath.

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. Capitalism in permanent crisis, 1920s–1930s

2. Political crisis and the crisis of modernity: Eastern Europe (1953–1968)

3. The crisis of Keynesianism, the transformation of liberal oligarchies and the critique of politics

4. The crisis of critique, the eclipse of subversive reason and the question of social constitution

5. The crisis and metamorphoses of the bourgeois individual: On negative anthropology

6. Capitalism as social regression: Destructive tendencies and new forms of barbarism

7. The 2008 economic crisis as an alienated critique of capitalism

Author

Christos Memos is Lecturer in Social and Political Theory at the Abertay University, UK. He is the author of Castoriadis and Critical Theory: Crisis, Critique and Radical Alternatives (2014).

(Global Economic Crisis and Social Hieroglyphic Genesis is available now Via Routledge with 20% off by using code SOC21 at the checkout.)

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