A Democratic Enlightenment: The Reconciliation Image, Aesthetic Education, Possible Politics - Morton Schoolman
A Democratic Enlightenment: The Reconciliation Image, Aesthetic Education, Possible Politics - Morton Schoolman Book
In A Democratic Enlightenment Morton Schoolman proposes aesthetic education through film as a way to redress the political violence inflicted on difference that society constructs as its racialized, gendered, Semitic, and sexualized other. Drawing on Voltaire, Diderot, and Schiller, Schoolman reconstructs the genealogical history of what he calls the reconciliation image-a visual model of a democratic ideal of reconciliation he then theorizes through Whitmans prose and poetry and Adornos aesthetic theory. Analyzing The Help (2011) and Gentlemans Agreement (1947), Schoolman shows how film produces a more advanced image of reconciliation than those originally created by modernist artworks. Each film depicts violence toward racial and ethnic difference while also displaying a reconciliation image that aesthetically educates the public about how the violence of constructing difference as otherness can be overcome. Mounting a democratic enlightenment, the reconciliation image in film illuminates a possible politics for challenging the rise of nationalisms violence toward differences in all their diversity.
P>Review "In a political climate marked by right-wing celebrations of misogyny, xenophobia, oligarchy, racism, militarism, and extractive capitalism, you might be skeptical of a book about the reconciliation image. But Morton Schoolman, in a startling and effective admixture of Whitmans democratic ethos, Adornos defense of a specifically aesthetic kind of critical reason, and contemporary films, contends that now is the time for new thinking about reconciliation. This is an original, creative, provocative, rewarding, and timely book."--Jane Bennett, author of "Influx and Efflux: Writing Up with Walt Whitman""Morton Schoolman is an accomplished, erudite, and wonderfully playful reader of both Whitman and Adorno. His insightful account of a democratic enlightenment through encounters with images opens spaces for politics that we wouldnt otherwise see. I didnt want to put this provocative book down!"--Lori Jo Marso, author of "Politics with Beauvoir: Freedom in the Encounter" About the Author: Morton Schoolman is Professor of Political Science at the State University of New York at Albany and author of Reason and Horror: Critical Theory, Democracy, and Aesthetic Individuality and The Imaginary Witness: The Critical Theory of Herbert Marcuse.(BK-9781478008033)
SKU | BK-9781478008033 |
Barcode # | 9781478008033 |
Brand | Duke University Press |
Artist / Author | Morton Schoolman |
Shipping Weight | 0.5200kg |
Shipping Width | 0.150m |
Shipping Height | 0.030m |
Shipping Length | 0.230m |
Type | Paperback |
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