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dc.contributor.authorArnall, Gavin
dc.contributor.authorGandolfi, Laura
dc.contributor.authorZaramella, Enea
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-10T09:24:56Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.citationArnall, Gavin; Gandolfi, Laura y Zaramella, Enea. Aesthetics and Politics Revisited: An Interview with Jacques Rancière. Critical Inquiry, 2012, 38(2), páginas 289-297. Disponible en <https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/662743>. Fecha de acceso: 10 jun. 2026. DOI: 10.1086/662743ca
dc.identifier.issn0093-1896ca
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12328/5395
dc.description.abstractIn this interview, Jacques Rancière describes the character of the aesthetic regime and the relationship between politics and aesthetics in his work, along with the role of artistic practices, technological innovations, and the institution of the museum in the redistribution of the sensible and the similarities and differences between his theories and Walter Benjamin’s work on modernity. Rancière argues that the aesthetic regime entails both a rupture with what came before it and the possibility of recycling and reinterpreting works of the past, what Benjamin described as the surrealist practice of evoking the outmoded. While emphasizing the political and military preconditions to the aesthetic regime over technological or economic considerations, Rancière also warns against drawing strict parallels between aesthetic regimes and political presuppositions of equality or inequality. Furthermore, Rancière refuses to privilege Marcel Duchamp’s readymades in the aesthetic regime’s redistribution of the sensible, pointing, instead, to Emile Zola’s Le ventre de Paris and the creation of the modern institution of the museum as key moments that broke with preexisting distributions of the sensible. Rancière also distinguishes his discussion of novelistic realism and narration from Benjamin’s characterization of modernity as the decline in the ability to narrate experience, critiquing Benjamin’s nostalgia for the past while recognizing as fruitful his linking of new possibilities in aesthetic experience to the creation of new technologies.ca
dc.format.extent8ca
dc.language.isoengca
dc.publisherThe University of Chicago Press Journalsca
dc.relation.ispartofCritical Inquiryca
dc.relation.ispartofseries38;2
dc.rights@ 2012 by The University of Chicago, 0093-1896/12/3802-0012$10.00. All rights reserved.ca
dc.subject.otherRancièreca
dc.subject.otherPolitical philosophyca
dc.subject.otherAestheticsca
dc.subject.otherFilosofía políticaca
dc.subject.otherEstéticaca
dc.subject.otherFilosofia políticaca
dc.subject.otherEstèticaca
dc.titleAesthetics and Politics Revisited: An Interview with Jacques Rancièreca
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleca
dc.description.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionca
dc.rights.accessLevelinfo:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
dc.embargo.termsforeverca
dc.subject.udc17ca
dc.identifier.doihttps://dx.doi.org/10.1086/662743ca
dc.date.embargoEnd9999-01-01


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