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A selection of Martin Jay's recent writings on contemporary thought and culture, this is a book about ideas that matter―and about why ideas matter. Borrowing from Flaubert's notion of a dictionary of "received ideas" and Raymond Williams's explorations of the "keywords" of the modern age, Jay investigates some of the central concepts by which we currently organize our thoughts and lives. His topics range from "theory" and "experience" to the meaning of "multiculturalism" and the dynamics of cultural "subversion." Among the thinkers he engages are Bataille and Foucault, Adorno and Lacoue-Labarthe, Walter Benjamin, Christa Wolf, and Jean-François Lyotard.

By looking closely at what "words do and perform," Jay makes us aware of the extent to which the language we use mediates and shapes our experience. By helping to distance us from much that we now take for granted, he makes it difficult for us to remain comfortably certain about what we think we know.

Elegantly written and richly insightful, this is a work of cultural criticism and intellectual analysis of the first order.

272 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 1998

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Martin Jay

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
634 reviews176 followers
February 10, 2014
Essentially the transitional text from Downcast Eyes to Songs of Experience -- as Jay works his way to the idea that a further interrogation of the rejection of the analytic veracity of vision poses the question of what alternative bases there are for arriving at knowledge and truth, e.g. "Experience" in its manifold modalities.
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