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Another Modernity
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements.

1. Introduction.

Part I: Space:.

2. The First Modernity: Humans and Machines.

Garden City and Functionalism.

Structuralism.

Formalism.

Modernist Humanism?.

Conclusions.

3. Simulated Humanism: Postmodern Architecture.

Avant-gardes.

History.

Humanism.

Complexity.

Vernacular.

Conclujsions.

4. Ground the City.

Fields of Mapping: Grids and Labyrinths.

Productions of Space: Classical and Gothic.

The Other Modernity: Lived Space in Japan.

Urban Space and Allegory.

Part II: Society.

5. From System to Symbol: Durkheim and French Sociology.

Space and Society.

System.

Symbol: Durkheim and Mauss.

6. Symbol and Allegory: Simmel and German Sociology.

Values and Facts.

From Symbol to Allegory.

Conclusion.

Part III: Experience.

7. The Natural Attitude and the Reflexive Attitude.

Alfred Schutz: from Meaning to Understanding Signification and Existence.

8. Difference and Infinity: Derrida.

Kant, Husserl, Derrida.

Escape from Totality.

Time and Self-presence.

Three Modes of Signification.

Part IV: Judgement.

9. Reflexive Judgement and Aesthetic Subjectivity.

Finality of the Object, Singularity of the Subject.

Permanence and Finitude: Gadamer.

10. Discourse, Figure....Sensation.

The Body With Organs.

Greeks, Jews, Pagans.

Conclusions.

Part V: Objects.

11. Objects that Judge: Latour's Parliament of Things.

Towards a Non-Modern Constitution.

Morphisms Weavers and Object Trackers.

Ç'accuse.

Networks: Spiralling Time and Space.

12. Bad Objects: Virilio.

From Cité to War Machine.

Death: Bads, Contingency, Theodicy.

From War to Cinema.

From the Mental and the Instrumental: The End of the Gaze.

Polar Inertia: The Last Vehicle.

Time of Exposure.

13. The Symbolic in Fragments: Walter Benjamin's Talking Things.

Allegory: The Aesthetics of Destruction.

Protestant Ethic, Baroque Melancholy.

14. Conclusion.

Notes.

Index.

About the Author

Scott Lash is Director of the Centre for Cultural Studies and Professor of Sociology at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He previously taught at Lancaster University for many years. He was a Humboldt Fellow in Berlin between 1988 and 1990. His previous books include The End of Organized Capitalism (co-author, 1987), Sociology of Postmodernism (1990), Modernity and Identity (co-editor, 1992), Economies of Signs and Space (co-author, 1994), Reflexive Modernization (co-author, 1994) and Detraditionalization (co-editor, 1996). His books have been translated into nine languages.

Reviews

"Serious, intelligent and innovative, this book compels us to rethink our modern/ postmodern certainties." Mark Poster, Laguna Beach, California

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