Aesthetics Qua Excess: Mario Perniola and Jacques Rancière

Authors

  • Erik Vogt

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.320

Keywords:

Jacques Rancière, Mario Perniola, excess of aesthetics, distribution of the sensible, sensology, remainder

Abstract

According to Jacques Rancière, the contemporary anti-aesthetic consensus has denounced aesthetics “as the perverse discourse which bars this encounter and which subjects works, or our appreciation thereof, to a machine of thought conceived for other ends: the philosophical absolute, the religion of the poem or the dream of social emancipation” (Rancière, Aesthetics and Its Discontents, 2009: 2). However, what seems to be the most problematic trait of aesthetics is its excessive confusion of “pure thought, sensible affects and artistic practices.”

But for both Rancière and Mario Perniola, the excess of aesthetics, that is, its confusion and obliteration of the borders between the arts, between high art and popular art, as well as between art and life – a commixture not to be mistaken for some postmodern transgression of modernist boundaries, for both Rancière and Perniola keep critical distance to the notions of modernism and postmodernism – constitutes the very knot “by which thoughts, practices and affects are instituted and assigned a territory or a ‘specific’ object” (Rancière, Aesthetics and Its Discontents, 2009: 4).

This paper will demonstrate that aesthetics in Rancière and Perniola represents neither simply a general art theory nor a theory defining art by means of its effects on the senses, but rather a specific order of the identification and thinking of art. Moreover, it will argue that Rancière’s and Perniola’s respective elaborations of the relationship between aesthetics and art occur in the larger context of a primary aesthetics associated with the topographical analysis of the means in which the sensible, common world is constructed, parceled out and contested. It will also be shown that primary aesthetics, for both Rancière and Perniola, includes non-artistic realms and practices such as politics, culture, education, science, and economy in that all these realms and practices presuppose the sensible configuration of a specific world. Thus, primary aesthetics is ultimately to be grasped as distribution of the sensible (Rancière) or as sensology (Perniola) that determines not only that which is given in a common manner, but also – and more specifically – that which can be seen, felt, said or done and at the same time modes of seeing, feeling, saying or doing that are excluded from that which is given in a common manner.

 

Article received: April 17, 2019; Article accepted: July 6, 2019; Published online: October 2019; Original scholarly paper

 

Author Biography

Erik Vogt

Department of Philosophy, Trinity College, Hartford
United States

Erik Vogt is Gwendolyn Miles Smith Professor of Philosophy at Trinity College (CT, USA); he also teaches regularly in the Philosophy Department at the University of Vienna (Vienna, Austria). He is the author and (co-) editor of 22 books, and author of over 60 articles. His latest book publications include Aesthetisch-Politische Lektueren zum “Fall Wagner“ (2015); Bruchlinien Europas (2016); Adorno and the Concept of Genocide (2016); Zwischen Sensologie und aesthetischem Dissens (2019). He is currently completing a co-edited volume entitled “Jacques Rancière und die Literatur” (forthcoming in 2019).

References

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Rothenberg. Molly Anne. “Rancière’s Aesthetic Regime: Modernism, Politics, and the Logic of Excess.” In A Handbook of Modernism Studies, edited by Jean-Michel Rabaté, 431–44: Chicester: Wiley & Sons, 2013. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118488638.ch25

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.320 DOI: https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.320

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Published

15.10.2019

How to Cite

Vogt, E. (2019). Aesthetics Qua Excess: Mario Perniola and Jacques Rancière. AM Journal of Art and Media Studies, (20), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i20.320

Issue

Section

Main Topic: Contemporary Aesthetics of Media and Post-Media Art Practices