• Treffer 1 von 1
Zurück zur Trefferliste

Warburg's ghost : on literary atlases and the 'anatopic' shift of a cartographic object

  • Filippo Trentin's essay 'Warburg's Ghost: On Literary Atlases and the "Anatopic" Shift of a Cartographic Object' analyses the atlas as a method of assemblage in literary theory. It takes issue with the use of cartography advocated by proponents of a 'spatial turn' within literary studies, including Malcolm Bradbury's "Atlas of Literature", Franco Moretti's "Atlas of European Literature", and Sergio Luzzatto and Gabriele Pedullà's "Atlante della letteratura italiana". While these atlases claim to dismantle the normative canon of historicism and to offer a different way of gathering knowledge, Trentin argues that they often risk reproducing analogous positivistic, hierarchical, and colonizing assumptions. Showing a totalizing attitude embedded in modern atlases and in the 'cartographic reason' emerging from the sixteenth century onwards, the essay proposes a speculative and heuristic use of the term 'anatopy' that aims to capture the disorienting potentialities that are intrinsic to non-cartographic explorations of space. In particular, it interprets Aby Warburg's "Bilderatlas Mnemosyne" as an 'anatopic' object that keeps troubling any purely cartographic use of the atlas. In Trentin's reading, by theorizing an anti-foundational (and anti-identitarian) method of knowledge organization based on the morphological affect between disparate images and objects, Warburg's project leads to the profanation of the atlas as a topographical machine and, with its recurrences, intervals, and voids, destitutes its traditional apparatus of power. This disparate and anti-holistic aesthetic disposition challenges the solid foundations of the constructions of historicism and cartographic reason. It breaks up the technical explanation of cause and effect and substitutes it with a 'danced causality', which Trentin relates to Leo Bersani's idea of 'aesthetic subject' and the possibility of moving beyond an immobile and filial principle of identity formation towards a virtual and impersonal one that is located beyond the 'ego', as well as beyond the rigid borders of cartographic reason and the linearity of positivistic historicism.

Volltext Dateien herunterladen

Metadaten exportieren

Weitere Dienste

Teilen auf Twitter Suche bei Google Scholar
Metadaten
Verfasserangaben:Filippo Trentin
URN:urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-552637
URL:https://www.ici-berlin.org/oa/ci-11/trentin_warburgs-ghost.pdf
DOI:https://doi.org/10.37050/ci-11_06
ISBN:978-3-85132-854-7
ISSN:2627-731X
Titel des übergeordneten Werkes (Englisch):De/constituting wholes : towards partiality without parts / edited by Manuele Gragnolati and Christoph F.E. Holzhey ; Cultural inquiry ; vol. 11
Verlag:Turia + Kant
Verlagsort:Wien ; Berlin
Dokumentart:Teil eines Buches (Kapitel)
Sprache:Englisch
Jahr der Fertigstellung:2020
Jahr der Erstveröffentlichung:2017
Veröffentlichende Institution:Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg
Datum der Freischaltung:28.07.2020
Freies Schlagwort / Tag:Archives; Cartography; Historicism; Illustrated atlas; Knowledge representation; Totality (Philosophy)
GND-Schlagwort:Warburg, Aby Moritz; Mnemosyne; Atlas; Bildband; Assemblage; Kartografie; Wissensrepräsentation; Spatial turn; Historizismus; Totalität; Archiv
Seitenzahl:29
Erste Seite:101
Letzte Seite:128
HeBIS-PPN:467744319
DDC-Klassifikation:1 Philosophie und Psychologie / 10 Philosophie / 100 Philosophie und Psychologie
8 Literatur / 80 Literatur, Rhetorik, Literaturwissenschaft / 800 Literatur und Rhetorik
Sammlungen:CompaRe | Allgemeine und Vergleichende Literaturwissenschaft
CompaRe | Allgemeine und Vergleichende Literaturwissenschaft / ICI Berlin
Lizenz (Deutsch):License LogoCreative Commons - Namensnennung-Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen