Book ID: CBB575907621

Contingency and the Limits of History: How Touch Shapes Experience and Meaning (2019)

unapi

Carlson, Liane (Author)


Columbia University Press


Publication Date: 2019
Physical Details: 304
Language: English

Central to the historicizing work of recent decades has been the concept of contingency, the realm of chance, change, and the unnecessary. Following Nietzsche and Foucault, genealogists have deployed contingency to show that all institutions and ideas could have been otherwise as a critique of the status quo. Yet scholars have spent very little time considering the genealogy of contingency itself—or what its history means for its role in politics.In Contingency and the Limits of History, Liane Carlson historicizes contingency by tying it to its theological and etymological roots in “touch,” contending that much of its critical, disruptive power is specific to our current historical moment. She returns to an older definition of contingency found in Christian theology that understands it as the lot of mortal creatures, who suffer, feel, bleed, and change, in contrast to a necessary, unchanging, impassible God. Far from dying out, Carlson reveals, this theological past persists in continental philosophy, where thinkers such as Novalis, Schelling, Merleau-Ponty, and Serres have imagined contingency as a type of radical destabilization brought about by the body’s collision with a changing world. Through studies of sickness, loneliness, violation, and love, she shows that different experiences of contingency can lead to dramatically dissimilar ethical and political projects. A strikingly original reconsideration of one of continental philosophy and critical theory’s most cherished concepts, this book reveals the limits of historicist accounts.

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Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB575907621/

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Authors & Contributors
Dagg, Joachim
Blount, Zachary D.
Pfeiffer, Judith
Şahi̇n, Kaya
Burt, William D.
Thum, Rian
Concepts
Historiography
History as a discipline; chronology; study of the past
Philosophy and politics
Philosophy and religion
Contingency (philosophy)
Historical method
Time Periods
20th century, late
18th century
Progressive Era (1890s-1920s)
Early modern
Medieval
21st century
Places
United States
Europe
England
Ottoman Empire
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