Description

Book Synopsis

A new ethics for the global practice of curating

Today, everyone is a curator. What was once considered a hallowed expertise is now a commonplace and global activity. Can this new worldwide activity be ethical and, if yes, how? This book argues that curating can be more than just selecting, organizing, and presenting information in galleries or online. Curating can also constitute an ethics, one of acquiring, arranging, and distributing an always conjectural knowledge about the world.

Curating as Ethics is primarily philosophical in scope, evading normative approaches to ethics in favor of an intuitive ethics that operates at the threshold of thought and action. It explores the work of authors as diverse as Heidegger, Spinoza, Meillassoux, Mudimbe, Chalier, and Kofman. Jean-Paul Martinon begins with the fabric of these ethics: how it stems from matter, how it addresses death, how it apprehends interhuman relationships. In the second part he establishes the ground on which the ethics is based, the things that make up the curatorial—for example, the textual and visual evidence or the digital medium. The final part focuses on the activity of curating as such—sharing, caring, preparing, dispensing, and so on.

With its invigorating new approach to curatorial studies, Curating as Ethics moves beyond the field of museum and exhibition studies to provide an ethics for anyone engaged in this highly visible activity, including those using social media as a curatorial endeavor, and shows how philosophy and curating can work together to articulate the world today.



Trade Review

"This is not only a masterful and wholly original rethinking of curating, it is also one of the most exciting treatises on ethics I have ever read. There are remarkably bracing philosophical insights on nearly every page, and Jean-Paul Martinon writes with such theoretical precision and poetic clarity. Heidegger after Martinon will forever have curating as part of ‘building dwelling thinking.’"—John Paul Ricco, author of The Decision Between Us: Art and Ethics in the Time of Scenes



Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction: Excess and More

Gods And Mortals

Dark Matter

Matter

Law

Mortals

God

Gods

Beckoning

Obsession

Strife

The Absolute

Earths and Skies

Earths

Skies

Objects

Angels

Words

Ghosts

Images

Gnoses

Contents

Names

Deeds and Ends

Saving

Caring

Preparing

Irritating

Fraternizing

Communing

Dignifying

Midwifing

Intuiting

Dispensing

Conclusion: Irony and Progeny

Acknowledgments

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Curating As Ethics

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    A Paperback / softback by Jean-Paul Martinon

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      View other formats and editions of Curating As Ethics by Jean-Paul Martinon

      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 28/01/2020
      ISBN13: 9781517908652, 978-1517908652
      ISBN10: 1517908655

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A new ethics for the global practice of curating

      Today, everyone is a curator. What was once considered a hallowed expertise is now a commonplace and global activity. Can this new worldwide activity be ethical and, if yes, how? This book argues that curating can be more than just selecting, organizing, and presenting information in galleries or online. Curating can also constitute an ethics, one of acquiring, arranging, and distributing an always conjectural knowledge about the world.

      Curating as Ethics is primarily philosophical in scope, evading normative approaches to ethics in favor of an intuitive ethics that operates at the threshold of thought and action. It explores the work of authors as diverse as Heidegger, Spinoza, Meillassoux, Mudimbe, Chalier, and Kofman. Jean-Paul Martinon begins with the fabric of these ethics: how it stems from matter, how it addresses death, how it apprehends interhuman relationships. In the second part he establishes the ground on which the ethics is based, the things that make up the curatorial—for example, the textual and visual evidence or the digital medium. The final part focuses on the activity of curating as such—sharing, caring, preparing, dispensing, and so on.

      With its invigorating new approach to curatorial studies, Curating as Ethics moves beyond the field of museum and exhibition studies to provide an ethics for anyone engaged in this highly visible activity, including those using social media as a curatorial endeavor, and shows how philosophy and curating can work together to articulate the world today.



      Trade Review

      "This is not only a masterful and wholly original rethinking of curating, it is also one of the most exciting treatises on ethics I have ever read. There are remarkably bracing philosophical insights on nearly every page, and Jean-Paul Martinon writes with such theoretical precision and poetic clarity. Heidegger after Martinon will forever have curating as part of ‘building dwelling thinking.’"—John Paul Ricco, author of The Decision Between Us: Art and Ethics in the Time of Scenes



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Introduction: Excess and More

      Gods And Mortals

      Dark Matter

      Matter

      Law

      Mortals

      God

      Gods

      Beckoning

      Obsession

      Strife

      The Absolute

      Earths and Skies

      Earths

      Skies

      Objects

      Angels

      Words

      Ghosts

      Images

      Gnoses

      Contents

      Names

      Deeds and Ends

      Saving

      Caring

      Preparing

      Irritating

      Fraternizing

      Communing

      Dignifying

      Midwifing

      Intuiting

      Dispensing

      Conclusion: Irony and Progeny

      Acknowledgments

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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