Description
Book SynopsisIt is a commonplace that the modern world cannot be experienced as enchanted - that the very concept of enchantment belongs to past ages of superstition. This title challenges that view. It seeks to rehabilitate enchantment, showing not only how it is possible to experience wonder, but how such experience is crucial to motivating ethical behavior.
Trade Review"The very best feature of
The Enchantment of Modern Life is the way it performs its own thesis: it is an enchanting, wonderful, and generous book that edifies and elevates the reader."
—Moira Gatens, University of Sydney"This book is a delight to read. Bennett has a remarkable talent for both being imaginative and yet not letting the enchantment of this flight lead her to fail in the task of carefully engaging those with whom she disagrees. She is enacting her own ideal of generosity while forging a powerful and original vision of late modern life. The core strength of this book lies in the way it draws the reader to entertain a distinctively different way of experiencing the world. No small achievement."
—Stephen K. White, Virginia Tech, and Editor of Political Theory"Bennett can do what others have not yet been able to do because she goes to the heart of the matter, to the foundation of those who claim to be foundationless, namely, to our underlying presumptions about the character of the material universe. She is a wonderful writer; her prose is crisp and clear, full of startling and enchanting formulations. The general effect of her book is to induce in us moments of enchantment, the ethical significance of which Bennett makes clear: she endeavors to attach us to the world, to bring forth our love for life, so that we are inspired to exercise greater care toward humanity and the material universe in which we live."
—Melissa Orlie, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign"
The Enchantment of Modern Life has something very rare in an academic work: a mission. Even rarer, its sense of mission comes at no one's expense. The project is at once scholarly and ethical, seamlessly, integrally. This is not just another treatment of modernity. It is an exemplar, offering a gentle cure—a modernity of wonder—to the critical-cynical detachment that has been the hallmark of the humanities theorist for too long."
—Brian Massumi, State University of New York at AlbanyTable of Contents*Frontmatter, pg. i*Contents, pg. v*Acknowledgments, pg. vii*1. The Wonder of Minor Experiences, pg. 1*2. Cross-Species Encounters, pg. 17*3. The Marvelous Worlds of Paracelsus, Kant, and Deleuze, pg. 33*4. Disenchantment Tales, pg. 56*5. Complexity and Enchantment, pg. 91*6. Commodity Fetishism and Commodity Enchantment, pg. 111*7. Ethical Energetics, pg. 131*8. Attachments and Refrains, pg. 159*Notes, pg. 175*Index, pg. 209