When Theodor W. Adorno returned to Germany from his exile in the
United States, he was appointed as a lecturer and researcher at the
University of Frankfurt and he immediately made a name for himself as
a leading public intellectual. Adorno’s widespread influence on the
postwar debates was due in part to the public lectures he gave outside
of the university in which he analysed and commented on social,
cultural and political developments of the time.
This first volume brings together Adorno’s lectures given between
1949 and 1968 on music, literature and the arts. With an engaging and
improvisational style, Adorno spoke with compelling enthusiasm on
subjects as diverse as Marcel Proust’s prose, Richard Strauss’s
composition technique and Arnold Schoenberg’s Pierrot lunaire.
Germany, restoring its social and intellectual institutions, needed to
embrace the new music and writers who had been neglected, particularly
with regards to Proust. To rebuild was taken to mean rediscovery, but
Adorno also nurtured a vision of tradition which - far from being
unthinkingly conservative - would attest to society’s
honestly-appraised relationship to the past while it underwent the
process of modernization. The volume illustrates Adorno’s deep
commitment to holding contemporary music and culture to standards
commensurate with the aspirations of a modern world emerging from the
horrors of war.
This volume of his lectures is a unique document of Adorno’s
startling ability to bring critical theory into dialogue with the
times in which he lived. It will be of great value to anyone
interested in the work of Adorno and critical theory, in German
intellectual and cultural history and in the history of modern music
and the arts.
Les mer
Music, Literature and the Arts
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781509552405
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Polity
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter