Description

Book Synopsis

An influential thinker on the concept of singularity and its implications on politics, theology, economics, psychoanalysis, and literature

For readers versed in critical theory, German and comparative literature, or media studies, a new book by Samuel Weber is essential reading. Singularity is no exception. Bringing together two decades of his essays, it hones in on the surprising implications of the singular and its historical relation to the individual in politics, theology, economics, psychoanalysis, and literature. Although singularity has long been a keyword in literary studies and philosophy, never has it been explored as in this book, which distinguishes singularity as an “aporetic” notion from individuality, with which it remains historically closely tied.

To speak or write of the singular is problematic, Weber argues, since once it is spoken of it is no longer strictly singular. Walter Benjamin observed that singularity and repetition imply each other. This approach informs the essays in Singularity. Weber notes that what distinguishes the singular from the individual is that it cannot be perceived directly, but rather experienced through feelings that depend on but also exceed cognition. This interdependence of cognition and affect plays itself out in politics, economics, and theology as well as in poetics. Political practice as well as its theory have been dominated by the attempt to domesticate singularity by subordinating it to the notion of individuality. Weber suggests that this political tendency draws support from what he calls “the monotheological identity paradigm” deriving from the idea of a unique and exclusive Creator-God.

Despite the “secular” tendencies usually associated with Western modernity, this paradigm continues today to inform and influence political and economic practices, often displaying self-destructive tendencies. By contrast, Weber reads the literary writings of Hölderlin, Nietzsche, and Kafka as exemplary practices that put singularity into play, not as fiction but as friction, exposing the self-evidence of established conventions to be responses to challenges and problems that they often prefer to obscure or ignore.



Trade Review

"One of the important thinkers of our time, Samuel Weber has published a magnum opus that is a must-read for anyone interested in poetics and theory today. Drawing on Kant, Nietzsche, Freud, Adorno, Benjamin, Derrida, and J-L Nancy, he analyzes singularization from ontology to politics, foregrounding questions central to the comparative humanities. Chapter by exhilarating chapter, this book models the abilities of critical theory to address myriad issues in singular ways."—Emily Apter, author of Unexceptional Politics: On Obstruction, Impasse, and the Impolitic

"There is a great pleasure in reading this book as it progresses because, even as it lays out the overarching theory of singularity, it also exemplifies, in its very form, the subject matter at hand. The various chapters in this book engage with singularity in innumerable ways and from any number of angles. Here, as is entirely appropriate, each entry remains wholly singular even as it is linked and connected to other moments and phenomena described. In this way we are given a philosophical, literary, and material demonstration of singularity, an issue that, as Samuel Weber makes clear, is both fundamental and critical for our, as well as any other, time."—James Martel, San Francisco State University



Table of Contents

Contents

Prefatory Note: Resisting—the Singular

Acknowledgments

Introduction. Singularity: An Aporetical Concept

1. Singularity, Individuality: From Anxiety to Anger

2. On the Militarization of Feeling

3. Bare Life and Life in General: The Question of “Concentration”

4. Psychoanalysis and the Mediacy of the Media

5. Protection, Projection, Persecution

6. The Single Trait

7. Money Is Time: Thoughts on Credit and Crisis

8. Global Inequality: The Question of Birthright

9. Mind the Cap: A Singular Approach to Europe

10. West of Eden: After the Good Life

11. After Its Kind: The Biblical Origins of Economic Theology

12. Like—Come Again?! On Nietzsche’s Eternal Recurrence

13. The Future of Saussure: A Signifying Moment

14. Anxiety, Psychoanalysis, and the Uncanny

15. The Singularity of Literary Cognition

16. Mis-taking the Measure of Poetry: Hölderlin Asks, Heidegger Answers

17. Towers and Walls: Building the Wall of China

18. Kafka’s Josefine, or How a Phrase Can Turn Out

19. Silencing the Sirens

Notes

Index

Singularity: Politics and Poetics

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    A Hardback by Samuel Weber

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      View other formats and editions of Singularity: Politics and Poetics by Samuel Weber

      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 25/05/2021
      ISBN13: 9781517910372, 978-1517910372
      ISBN10: 1517910374

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      An influential thinker on the concept of singularity and its implications on politics, theology, economics, psychoanalysis, and literature

      For readers versed in critical theory, German and comparative literature, or media studies, a new book by Samuel Weber is essential reading. Singularity is no exception. Bringing together two decades of his essays, it hones in on the surprising implications of the singular and its historical relation to the individual in politics, theology, economics, psychoanalysis, and literature. Although singularity has long been a keyword in literary studies and philosophy, never has it been explored as in this book, which distinguishes singularity as an “aporetic” notion from individuality, with which it remains historically closely tied.

      To speak or write of the singular is problematic, Weber argues, since once it is spoken of it is no longer strictly singular. Walter Benjamin observed that singularity and repetition imply each other. This approach informs the essays in Singularity. Weber notes that what distinguishes the singular from the individual is that it cannot be perceived directly, but rather experienced through feelings that depend on but also exceed cognition. This interdependence of cognition and affect plays itself out in politics, economics, and theology as well as in poetics. Political practice as well as its theory have been dominated by the attempt to domesticate singularity by subordinating it to the notion of individuality. Weber suggests that this political tendency draws support from what he calls “the monotheological identity paradigm” deriving from the idea of a unique and exclusive Creator-God.

      Despite the “secular” tendencies usually associated with Western modernity, this paradigm continues today to inform and influence political and economic practices, often displaying self-destructive tendencies. By contrast, Weber reads the literary writings of Hölderlin, Nietzsche, and Kafka as exemplary practices that put singularity into play, not as fiction but as friction, exposing the self-evidence of established conventions to be responses to challenges and problems that they often prefer to obscure or ignore.



      Trade Review

      "One of the important thinkers of our time, Samuel Weber has published a magnum opus that is a must-read for anyone interested in poetics and theory today. Drawing on Kant, Nietzsche, Freud, Adorno, Benjamin, Derrida, and J-L Nancy, he analyzes singularization from ontology to politics, foregrounding questions central to the comparative humanities. Chapter by exhilarating chapter, this book models the abilities of critical theory to address myriad issues in singular ways."—Emily Apter, author of Unexceptional Politics: On Obstruction, Impasse, and the Impolitic

      "There is a great pleasure in reading this book as it progresses because, even as it lays out the overarching theory of singularity, it also exemplifies, in its very form, the subject matter at hand. The various chapters in this book engage with singularity in innumerable ways and from any number of angles. Here, as is entirely appropriate, each entry remains wholly singular even as it is linked and connected to other moments and phenomena described. In this way we are given a philosophical, literary, and material demonstration of singularity, an issue that, as Samuel Weber makes clear, is both fundamental and critical for our, as well as any other, time."—James Martel, San Francisco State University



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Prefatory Note: Resisting—the Singular

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction. Singularity: An Aporetical Concept

      1. Singularity, Individuality: From Anxiety to Anger

      2. On the Militarization of Feeling

      3. Bare Life and Life in General: The Question of “Concentration”

      4. Psychoanalysis and the Mediacy of the Media

      5. Protection, Projection, Persecution

      6. The Single Trait

      7. Money Is Time: Thoughts on Credit and Crisis

      8. Global Inequality: The Question of Birthright

      9. Mind the Cap: A Singular Approach to Europe

      10. West of Eden: After the Good Life

      11. After Its Kind: The Biblical Origins of Economic Theology

      12. Like—Come Again?! On Nietzsche’s Eternal Recurrence

      13. The Future of Saussure: A Signifying Moment

      14. Anxiety, Psychoanalysis, and the Uncanny

      15. The Singularity of Literary Cognition

      16. Mis-taking the Measure of Poetry: Hölderlin Asks, Heidegger Answers

      17. Towers and Walls: Building the Wall of China

      18. Kafka’s Josefine, or How a Phrase Can Turn Out

      19. Silencing the Sirens

      Notes

      Index

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