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ISBN: PB: 9783037349397

University of Chicago Press, Diaphanes

January 2021

736 pp.

24.1x16.1 cm

85 halftones, 30 colour plates

PB:
£49,00
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Dialogical Imaginations

Aisthesis as Social Perception and New Ideas of Humanism

We tend to think of imagination as private, originating from our innermost selves – and language as something that is created in communication. Turning this idea on its head, the contributors to "Dialogical Imaginations" start from the provocative premise that imagination and language are both inherently social constructs that determine how we perceive the world. In addition, the idea of imagination as a dialogical formation, where dialogue within the self can raise questions and can open up new topics for consideration, may also be applied to how societies as a whole perceive their own conditions. With contributors from a wide range of disciplines, including philosophy, media and film studies, art history, literature, and sociology, the book considers a wide variety of cultural manifestations of social perception. In the process, it offers a reevaluation of he concept of humanism, addressing key criticisms of by Foucault, Butler, and others.

About the Author

Michael F. Zimmermann is an art historian and chair of the Department of Art History at the Catholic University of Eichstatt-Ingolstadt, Germany. He is the author or editor of several books, including "Vision in Motion", also published by Diaphanes.

Gernot Muller is professor of classical philology at the Catholic University of Eichstatt-Ingolstadt.

Christian Sauer is a researcher whose work focuses on synesthetic phenomena in contemporary art.

Kerstin Schmidt is professor of English and chair of the American Studies Department at the Catholic University of Eichstatt-Ingolstadt.

Robert Schmidt is professor for process-oriented sociology at the Catholic University of Eichstatt-Ingolstadt.

Fosca Mariani Zini is associate professor of philosophy at the Universite Lille 3.