Works by Brodsky, Claudia (exact spelling)

5 found
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  1.  26
    Art and Aesthetics After Adorno.J. M. Bernstein, Claudia Brodsky, Anthony J. Cascardi, Thierry de Duve, Aleš Erjavec, Robert Kaufman & Fred Rush (eds.) - 2022 - Fordham University Press.
    Theodor Adorno's Aesthetic Theory offers one of the most powerful and comprehensive critiques of art and of the discipline of aesthetics ever written. The work offers a deeply critical engagement with the history and philosophy of aesthetics and with the traditions of European art through the middle of the 20th century. It is coupled with ambitious claims about what aesthetic theory ought to be. But the cultural horizon of Adorno's Aesthetic Theory was the world of high modernism, and much has (...)
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  2.  6
    Kant and literary studies.Claudia Brodsky (ed.) - 2024 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book examines the premises and principles of Kant's explicitly interdisciplinary philosophy in its specific relation to the defining features, means and aims of literature. It provides readers with analyses of Kant's relationship to literature along intersecting, internal and external lines.
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  3. Szondi and Hegel:“The Troubled Relationship of Literary Criticism to Philosophy”.Claudia Brodsky - 2007 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2007 (140):45-63.
     
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  4.  9
    The linguistic condition: Kant's Critique of judgment and the poetics of action.Claudia Brodsky - 2021 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Providing a unique interpretation of Kant's theory of judgement as integral to his overall project, Claudia Brodsky explores his continued relevance to contemporary theoretical concerns. The Linguistic Condition traces how Kant combined sensus communis, or common sense with the communicative nature of judgement to reveal that, for him, acts of judgement are dependent on their linguistic articulation, so that in Kantian philosophy language and judgement are inextricably linked. In this first in-depth analysis of language in the Critique of Judgement, Brodsky (...)
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  5.  11
    “The Real Horizon” What Proust Had ‘in’ Mind.Claudia Brodsky - 2014 - In Julia Weber & Rüdiger Campe (eds.), Rethinking Emotion: Interiority and Exteriority in Premodern, Modern, and Contemporary Thought. De Gruyter. pp. 219-242.
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