Tickle Your Catastrophe! # 9

Paperback
Nombre de pages
215 p.
25,00 €

Whereas at the end of the twentieth century societies had to work through the traumatic effects of a century of political extremism and found the drive to rebuild society in the prospect of a better future, it is now, at the beginning of this new century, the fear of an inevitable and complete catastrophe that reigns. Worst-case scenarios have always played a role in the way our culture has imagined the future. The impending depletion of the world’s oil resources, the devastating effects of climate change, steep population growth, the breakdown of the economic system, pandemics and the threat of international terrorism have made catastrophe into a crucial notion to understand our relation with our time today. More than ever before, the expectation of catastrophe shapes our notion and experience of temporality and influences our ability to act in the present. This book wants to question the present future of calamity by focusing on the imagining of catastrophe, in art, architecture and philosophy. It collects some of the most inspiring contributions of the conference and reflects the interdisciplinary approach of this meeting.

The first part entitled 'Ruin Value' addresses the motif of the ruin in visual art and urban planning. The second section 'State of Emergency' gathers texts on catastrophism in philosophy and literature. The contributions of 'Media Disaster' focus on how images of catastrophe are mediated and mediatised in film, painting, the news and the performing arts. Subsequently, the final section 'Worst-Case Scenarios' considers the method of scenario thinking as a common strategy in the political discourse on global warming, the military, artistic interventions and urban planning.

Détails du produit
Détails du produit
Sous-titreImagining Catastrophe in Art, Architecture and Philosophy
ISBN9789038217222
Année2011
NUR640
Format160 x 240 mm
Nombre de pages215 p.
À propos de l’auteur

With contributions by Lieven De Cauter, Dirk De Meyer, Nicolas de Oliveira & Nicola Oxley, Pedro Gadanho, Vlad Ionescu, Thijs Lijster, Naeem Mohaiemen, Dany Nobus, Eli Noé, Johan Pas, Patrick Primavesi, Christian Salewski and Susan Schuppli.