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All That Is Solid Melts into Air is widely acclaimed as one of the
greatest books on modernity. A kaleidoscopic journey into the
experience of modernization, it captures the dizzying social
changes that swept up and transformed the lives of millions of
people. Berman delves into the aesthetic and intellectual
controversies of art, literature, and architecture: from the
writing of Goethe, Marx and Dostoevsky to the Paris of Baudelaire
and Haussmann, the Petersburg of the Tsarist builders and Pushkin,
and the New York of devastated wastelands and creative artists.
"Enlightening and valuable."—New Statesman. Berman charts the progress of the 20th-century experience.
Marshall Berman was one of the great urbanists and Marxist cultural
critics of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and his
brilliant, nearly sui generis book All That Is Solid Melts Into Air
is a masterpiece of the literature on modernism. But like many New
York intellectuals, the essay was his characteristic form,
accommodating his multifarious interests and expressing his
protean, searching exuberant mind. This collection includes early
essays from and on the radical '60s, on New York City, on literary
figures from Kafka to Pamuk, and late essays on rock, hip hop, and
gentrification. Concluding with his last essay, completed just
before his death in 2013, this book is Berman's intellectual
autobiography, tracing his career as a thinker through the way he
read the 'signs in the street'.
In this acclaimed exploration of the search for "authentic"
individual identity, Marshall Berman explores the historical
experiences and needs out of which this new radicalism arose.
Focussing on eighteenth-century Paris, a time and place in which a
distinctively modern form of society was just coming into its own,
Berman shows how the ideal of authenticity-of a self that could
organize the individual's energy and direct it toward his own
happiness-articulated eighteenth-century man's deepest responses to
this brave new world, and his most ardent hope for a new life in
it. Exploring in particular the ideas of Montesquieu and Rousseau,
Berman shows how the ideal of authenticity was radically opposed to
the bourgeois, capitalistic idea of "self-interest."
Described as 'a continuous carnival' and 'the crossroads of the
world, ' Times Square is a singular phenomenon: the spot where
imagination and veracity intersect. To Marshall Berman, it is also
the flashing, teeming, and strangely beautiful nexus of his life.
In this remarkable book, Berman takes us on a thrilling illustrated
tour of Times Square, revealing a landscape both mythic and real.
Interleafing his own recollections with social commentary, he
reveals how movies, graphic arts, literature, popular music,
television, and, of course, the Broadway theater have reflected
Times Square's voluminous light to illuminate a vast spectrum of
themes and vignettes. Part love letter, part revelatory semiotic
exposition of a place known to all, On the Town is a nonstop
excursion to the heart of American civilization, written by one of
our keenest, most entertaining cultural observers.
A new beginning for Marxism might just be on the horizon of a
landscape despoiled by Soviet communism and a now wobbling world
capitalism. The attention attracted by the 150th anniversary of The
Communist Manifesto included laudatory references to Marx in venues
as unexpected as The New York Times and The New Yorker. More
predictably, the tributes in such publications focused on the
strength of Marx as a critic of capital or a powerful wordsmith,
rather than as an advocate of communism. But, if Marxism is to
enjoy a rebirth in the coming century, appreciation needs to move
beyond its value as a critical tool or a literary pleasure. The
emancipatory potential of Marxism, its capacity to configure a
world beyond the daily grind of selling one's labor to stay alive,
will have to be established anew. No one has made a better start to
this task than the esteemed critic and writer Marshall Berman.
Berman first read The Communist Manifesto in the same week as
Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman while at high school. A few
years later, now a student at Columbia University, he was handing
out copies of Marx's 1844 Manuscripts, purchased for 50 cents each
at the (Soviet) Four Continents Bookstore in New York, as holiday
presents for friends and relatives. Here was the beginning of a
lifelong engagement with Marxism that, as this volume demonstrates,
has been both consistent and refreshing. In these pages are
discussions of work on Marx and Marxism by Edmund Wilson, Jerrold
Siegel, James Billington, Georg Lukcs, Irving Howe and Isaac Babel.
They are brought together in a single embrace by Berman's spirited
appreciation of Marxism as expressive, playful, sometimes even a
little vulgar, but always an adventure.
In this acclaimed exploration of the search for 'authentic'
individual identity, Marshall Berman explores the historical
experiences and needs out of which this new radicalism arose.
Focussing on eighteenth-century Paris, a time and place in which a
distinctively modern form of society was just coming into its own,
Berman shows how the ideal of authenticity - of a self that could
organize the individual's energy and direct it toward his own
happiness - articulated eighteenth-century man's deepest responses
to this brave new world, and his most ardent hope for a new life in
it. Exploring in particular the ideas of Montesquieu and Rousseau,
Berman shows how the ideal of authenticity was radically opposed to
the bourgeois, capitalistic idea of 'self-interest'.
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