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A searching account of the ethics and aesthetics of the home: the place that is most important in determining human happiness.
A bedroom, a kitchen, a bathroom - are these rooms all that make a home? Not at all, argues Emanuele Coccia. The buildings we inhabit are of immense psychological and cultural significance. They play a decisive role in human flourishing and, for hundreds of years, their walls and walkways, windows and doorways have guided our relationships with others and with ourselves. They reflect and reinforce social inequalities; they allow us to celebrate and cherish those we love. They are the places of return that allow us to venture out into the world.
In this intimate, elegantly argued account, Coccia shows how the architecture of home has shaped, and continues to shape, our psyches and our societies, before then masterfully leading us towards a more creative, ecological way of dwelling in the world.
We like to imagine ourselves as rational beings who think and
speak, yet to live means first and foremost to look, taste, feel,
or smell the world around us. But sensibility is not just a
faculty: We are sensible objects both to ourselves and to others,
and our life is through and through a sensible life. This book, now
translated into five languages, rehabilitates sensible existence
from its marginalization at the hands of modern philosophy,
theology, and politics. Coccia begins by defining the ontological
status of images. Not just an internal modification of our
consciousness, an image has an intermediate ontological status that
differs from that of objects or subjects. The book's second part
explores our interactions with images in dream, fashion, and
biological facts like growth and generation. Our life, Coccia
argues, is the life of images.
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Botanical: Observing Beauty (Hardcover)
Filipa Ramos, Emanuele Coccia, Alice Thomine-Berrada, Estelle Zhong Mengual; Interview of Jean-Marc Mansvelt, …
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R1,274
R1,109
Discovery Miles 11 090
Save R165 (13%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The work of 38 established and emerging artists explore the
creative potential of risk-taking and transgression in contemporary
life The unconventional theme underlying the art featured in this
book is the struggle between risk-taking and the prediction
algorithms that have become a feature of contemporary life. Does
the influence of machine intelligence, and the coincident avoidance
of risk, homogenize creative thought? These ideas are explored in
the work of 38 established and emerging artists in a variety of
media including painting, drawing, sculpture, sculpture, video art,
computer art, and performance. Featured artists include Joelle
Tuerlinckx, Ed Atkins, Esther Ferrer, Mounira Al Solh, and Shezad
Dawoud. The book takes its title from a town on the French-Belgian
border with a history as a well-known customs outpost. Distributed
for Mercatorfonds Exhibition Schedule: WIELS Museum for
Contemporary Art Brussels (September 12, 2020-February 10, 2021)
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Fabrice Hyber, The Valley (Hardcover)
Fabrice Hyber; Interview by Bruce Albert, Emanuele Coccia; Contributions by Pascal Rousseau, Olivier Schwartz
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R1,162
Discovery Miles 11 620
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Kapwani Kiwanga (Paperback)
Kapwani Kiwanga; Edited by Clement Dirie; Text written by Omar Berrada, Amzat Boukari-Yabara, Emanuele Coccia, …
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R1,122
R913
Discovery Miles 9 130
Save R209 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Objects are all around us - and images of objects, advertisements
for objects. Things are no longer merely purely physical or
economic entities: within the visual economy of advertising, they
are inescapably moral. Any object, regardless of its nature, can
for at least a moment aspire to be "good," can become not just an
object of value but a complex of possible happiness, a moral source
of perfection for any one of us. Our relation to things, Coccia,
argues in this provocative book, is what makes us human, and the
object world must be conceived as an ultimate artifact in order for
it to be the site of what the philosophical tradition has
considered "the good." Thinking a radical political praxis against
a facile materialist critique of things, Coccia shows how objects
become the medium through which a city enunciates its ethos, making
available an ethical life to those who live among them. When we
acknowledge that our notion of "the good" resides within a world of
things, we must grant that in advertising, humans have revealed
themselves as organisms that are ethically inseparable from the
very things they produce, exchange, and desire. In the advertising
imaginary, to be human is to be a moral cyborgs whose existence
attains ethical perfection only via the universe of things. The
necessary alienation which commodities cause and express is moral
rather than economic or social; we need our own products not just
to survive biologically or to improve the physical conditions of
our existence, but to live morally. Ultimately, Coccia's
provocative book offers a radically political rethinking of the
power of images. The problem of contemporary politics is not the
anesthetization of words but the excess power we invest in them.
Within images, we already live in another form of political life,
which has very little to do with the one invented and formalized by
the ancient and modern legal tradition. All we need to do is to
recognize it. Advertising and fashion are just the primitive,
sometimes grotesque, but ultimately irrepressible prefiguration of
the new politics to come.
Objects are all around us - and images of objects, advertisements
for objects. Things are no longer merely purely physical or
economic entities: within the visual economy of advertising, they
are inescapably moral. Any object, regardless of its nature, can
for at least a moment aspire to be "good," can become not just an
object of value but a complex of possible happiness, a moral source
of perfection for any one of us. Our relation to things, Coccia,
argues in this provocative book, is what makes us human, and the
object world must be conceived as an ultimate artifact in order for
it to be the site of what the philosophical tradition has
considered "the good." Thinking a radical political praxis against
a facile materialist critique of things, Coccia shows how objects
become the medium through which a city enunciates its ethos, making
available an ethical life to those who live among them. When we
acknowledge that our notion of "the good" resides within a world of
things, we must grant that in advertising, humans have revealed
themselves as organisms that are ethically inseparable from the
very things they produce, exchange, and desire. In the advertising
imaginary, to be human is to be a moral cyborgs whose existence
attains ethical perfection only via the universe of things. The
necessary alienation which commodities cause and express is moral
rather than economic or social; we need our own products not just
to survive biologically or to improve the physical conditions of
our existence, but to live morally. Ultimately, Coccia's
provocative book offers a radically political rethinking of the
power of images. The problem of contemporary politics is not the
anesthetization of words but the excess power we invest in them.
Within images, we already live in another form of political life,
which has very little to do with the one invented and formalized by
the ancient and modern legal tradition. All we need to do is to
recognize it. Advertising and fashion are just the primitive,
sometimes grotesque, but ultimately irrepressible prefiguration of
the new politics to come.
We like to imagine ourselves as rational beings who think and
speak, yet to live means first and foremost to look, taste, feel,
or smell the world around us. But sensibility is not just a
faculty: We are sensible objects both to ourselves and to others,
and our life is through and through a sensible life. This book, now
translated into five languages, rehabilitates sensible existence
from its marginalization at the hands of modern philosophy,
theology, and politics. Coccia begins by defining the ontological
status of images. Not just an internal modification of our
consciousness, an image has an intermediate ontological status that
differs from that of objects or subjects. The book's second part
explores our interactions with images in dream, fashion, and
biological facts like growth and generation. Our life, Coccia
argues, is the life of images.
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