Artikelen

Ruins in the Expanded Field

Auteurs

  • Jake Romm Unaffiliated

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21827/krisis.43.1.38398

Trefwoorden:

Necropolitics, Ruins, End of history, Paolo Virno, Aesthetics

Samenvatting

This paper applies the Klein Group form used by Rosalind Krauss in her essay, "Sculpture in the Expanded Field", to the field of ruins. The opposition utilized to create the ruin Klein Group is the opposition between vanished and intact. The paper proceeds by classifying and discussing each of the possibilities opened up by the expanded field: ruins (not-vanished ; not-intact), consecrated sites (vanished ; not-vanished), ruin-reproduction (vanished ; intact), and finally the "necroaesthetical ruin" (intact ; not-intact). The expanded field and the political and aesthetic implications thereof are discussed primarily in conversation with Paolo Virno's "Deja Vu and the End of History," as well as Achille Mbembe's "Necropolitics" and Andreas Huyssen's "Nostalgia for Ruins.”

Biografie auteur

Jake Romm, Unaffiliated

Jake Romm is a writer and human rights lawyer based in Brooklyn, NY. His work has appeared in the International Criminal Law Review, Strange Matters, The Brooklyn Rail, Photograph Magazine and elsewhere. 

Gepubliceerd

2023-09-08

Citeerhulp

Romm, Jake. 2023. “Ruins in the Expanded Field”. Krisis | Tijdschrift Voor Hedendaagse Filosofie 43 (1):85-105. https://doi.org/10.21827/krisis.43.1.38398.