Is, as Hamlet once complained, time out joint? Have the ways we understand the past and the future-and their relationship to the present-been reordered? The past, it seems, has returned with a vengeance: as aggressive nostalgia, as traumatic memory, or as atavistic origin narratives rooted in nation, race, or tribe. The future, meanwhile, has lost its utopian glamor, with the belief in progress and hope for a better future eroded by fears of ecological collapse.
In this provocative book, Aleida Assmann argues that the apparently solid moorings of our temporal orientation have collapsed within the span of a generation. To understand this profound cultural crisis, she reconstructs the rise and fall of what she calls time regime of modernity that underpins notions of modernization and progress, a shared understanding that is now under threat. Is Time Out of Joint? assesses the deep change in the temporality of modern Western culture as it relates to our historical experience, historical theory, and our life-world of shared experience, explaining what we have both gained and lost during this profound transformation.
Aleida Assmann was until 2014 Chair of English Literature and Literary Theory at the University of Konstanz. She is the author of several books that have been translated into English, including most recently, Cultural Memory and Western Civilization. With her husband Jan, she was awarded the prestigious 2017 Balzan Prize for Collective Memory and the 2018 Peace Prize of the German Book Trade.
Sarah Clift is Assistant Professor of Contemporary Studies at the University of King's College, Halifax.
Title: Is Time Out of Joint? (signale|TRANSFER: German Thought in Translation)
Author: Sarah Clift,Aleida Assmann
ISBN: 9781501742439
Binding:
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication Date: 2020-02-15
Number of Pages: 264
Weight: 0.5402 kg
Since the 1970s, Aleida Assmann has been one of the most distinguished and prominent figures in transatlantic academia, working at the intersections of critical theory, literary and cultural studies, and memory studies. This book in particular is timely and urgent. -- Kirk Wetters, Yale University, author of Demonic History from Goethe to the Present
As one of Germany's leading humanist intellectuals, Aleida Assmann is an authoritative voice on cultural and historical change. -- Michael Rothberg, UCLA, author of The Implicated Subject