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Our Broad Present

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An internationally acclaimed theorist examines the consequences of our changing relationship to time and space.
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  • 27 May 2014
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Considering a range of present-day phenomena, from the immediacy effects of literature to the impact of hypercommunication, globalization, and sports, Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht notes an important shift in our relationship to history and the passage of time. Although we continue to use concepts inherited from a "historicist" viewpoint, a notion of time articulated in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the actual construction of time in which we live in today, which shapes our perceptions, experiences, and actions, is no longer historicist. Without fully realizing it, we now inhabit a new, unnamed space in which the "closed future" and "ever-available past" (a past we have not managed to leave behind) converge to produce an "ever-broadening present of simultaneities."

This profound change to a key dimension of our existence has complex consequences for the way in which we think about ourselves and our relation to the material world. At the same time, the ubiquity of digital media has eliminated our tactile sense of physical space, altering our perception of our world. Gumbrecht draws on his mastery of the philosophy of language to enrich his everyday observations, traveling to Disneyland, a small town in Louisiana, and the center of Vienna to produce striking sketches of our broad presence in the world.

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Price: $26.00
Pages: 112
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Insurrections: Critical Studies in Religion, Politics, and Culture
Publication Date: 27 May 2014
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231163613
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Deconstruction, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Globalization, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies

In Our Broad Present, Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, one of our most insightful and influential literary and cultural theorists, has distilled from the extraordinary breadth of literary, historical, cultural, and philosophical interventions that has defined his work for the last three decades a pointed and poignant diagnosis of our contemporary ethos. As those who are familiar with his oeuvre know, Gumbrecht's distaste for the humanistic insistence on interpretation, language, and meaning and his preference for the material dimension of culture led him to embrace, with his characteristic pleasure in shirking academic trends, a term that had become almost unmentionable in the years following the ascendency of deconstruction: presence. In Our Broad Present, he puts this concept to use in trenchantly analyzing—in his now recognizable style meshing autobiography, anecdote, and at times auto-ironic musings—the gains and losses of living in a hyper-mediated world in which presence has become all the more valuable to the extent that we are losing it.
— William Egginton, Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities, The Johns Hopkins University
Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht is a German-born American literary theorist and the Albert Guérard Professor of Literature at Stanford University. He teaches at the Université de Montréal, the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (Paris), and the Collège de France. He is the author of Production of Presence, What Meaning Cannot Convey, Living at the Edge of Time, and Making Sense in Life and Literature.

Acknowledgments
Tracking a Hypothesis
1. Presence in Language or Presence Achieved Against Language?
2. A Negative Anthropology of Globalization
3. Stagnation: Temporal, Intellectual, Heavenly
4. "Lost in Focused Intensity": Spectator Sports and Strategies of Re-Enchantment
5. Steady Admiration in an Expanding Present: On Our New Relationship with Classics
6. Infinite Availability: About Hyper-Communication (and Old Age)
In the Broad Present
Notes
Index