Image for Critique of Journalistic Reason : Philosophy and the Time of the Newspaper

Critique of Journalistic Reason : Philosophy and the Time of the Newspaper

See all formats and editions

An encounter between philosophy and journalism recurs across the modern philosophical tradition.

Images of reporters and newspaper readers, messengers and town criers, announcements and rumors populate the work of such thinkers as Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Benjamin.

This book argues that these three thinkers’ preoccupation with journalism cannot be separated from their philosophy “proper” but plays a pivotal role in their philosophical work, where it marks an important nexus between their theories of history, time, and language.

Journalism, in the tradition Vandeputte brings to light, figures before anything else as a cipher of the time in which philosophy is written.

If the journalist and newspaper reader characterize what Kierkegaard calls “the present age,” that is because they exemplify a present marked by the crisis of the philosophy of history—a time after the demise of history as a philosophizable concept.

In different ways, the pages of the newspaper appear in the European philosophical tradition as a site where teleological and totalizing representations of history must founder, together with the conceptions of progress and development that sustain them. But journalism does not simply mark the end of philosophy; for Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Benjamin, journalistic writing also takes on an exemplary role in the attempt to think time and history in the wake of this demise.

The concepts around which these attempts crystallize—Kierkegaard’s “instant,” Nietzsche’s “untimeliness,” and Benjamin’s “actuality”—all emerge from the philosophical confrontation with journalism and its characteristic temporalities.

Read More
Available
£86.40 Save 20.00%
RRP £108.00
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 4 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
Fordham University Press
0823290263 / 9780823290260
Hardback
070.4
01/09/2020
United States
272 pages
152 x 229 mm