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For Walter Benjamin and Gilles Deleuze, who both authored seminal theoretical works on early cinema and photography, the history of modern media begins much earlier, in Baroque culture and science. Benjamin, Deleuze and the Baroque argues that their media theories were informed by their respective readings of the philosophy and mathematics of G.W. Leibniz, and the Baroque can thus be seen as the locus of modern media.
By critically comparing Benjamin and Deleuze's interpretations of the Baroque, Levin demonstrates the extent to which their theories of visual culture are intertwined with critiques of Enlightenment historiography and politics. Using a hermeneutic comparative approach, this book argues that the juxtaposition of Benjamin's reception of Leibniz with Deleuze's highlights the extent to which both authors' theories of image and media were informed by Leibniz's concepts of expression and perspectivism, themselves inspired by ground-breaking evolutions in optics and perspective. Providing close readings of Deleuze's The Fold and Benjamin's Origin of the German Trauerspiel, which remain understudied in the English language, it explores how, in their dual roles of philosopher and cultural critic, the pair may illuminate our own age of multiple crises through the Baroque.
Published | Feb 06 2025 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 240 |
ISBN | 9781350414211 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
Dimensions | 234 x 156 mm |
Series | Walter Benjamin Studies |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Noa Levin's superb study of Benjamin and Deleuze's engagement with Leibniz paints a compelling picture of the enduring significance of the Baroque for modern media theory. By rigorously triangulating these thinker's positions, Levin not only unsettles some persistent preconceptions concerning Leibniz's account of our world as the best of all possible worlds; she also impressively manages to bring out the contemporary resonance of early modern thought – and its 20th-century reception – for understanding time, history, and politics in the image-scape of the 21st century.
Sebastian Truskolaski, Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in German Cultural Studies, University of Manchester, UK.
While the Baroque is known for many things, clarity is not among them. And yet, like 'a certain glass or mirror' placed upon an anamorphic image, Noa Levin's study provides a lucid and compelling viewpoint precisely on account of the complexity and nuance of its subject matter.
Tim Flanagan, Lecturer in Humanities, Murdoch University, Australia
This is a fascinating study of the convergences between Benjamin and Deleuze's unorthodox interpretations of Leibniz. It finds that Leibniz anticipates a cinematic experience, and that his concepts of “expression,” “perspectivism,” and the “monad,” as a “living mirror of the universe,” are key to understanding Benjamin and Deleuze's media theories.
Paula Schwebel, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Toronto Metropolitan University, Canada
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