"'Time' and 'world' are such familiar concepts that we rarely take their fragility into account. The rhythm of time and the feeling of the presence of a world provide us with a metaphysical landscape where we might be able to live - a place where reality makes enough sense to be existentially navigable. Several different worlds have emerged throughout history, each with its own range of what seemed possible and reasonable to do, to think and to imagine. Each of them has survived only as long as there have been voices singing out their metaphysical rhythm, and it has vanished together with the silencing of their world-song, leaving behind only ruins. At times, culture has to operate in a world that is about to exhaust its historical arc, speeding towards a horizon turned into a wall. What can a world say, when its only audience belongs to a time that will come after the end of the future? How can a world think about the cultural heritage of its own ruins? Throughout history, a tradition has been able to speak across time-segments. Its grotesque style of culture has carried forward a multi-dimensional cosmology, nestled within every speck of reality. A constant insurrection against the rule of mortality, which severs the solidarity between worlds, prophetic culture is a vessel sailing eternally over the boundaries between worlds. Perhaps, it might be possible also for us, today, to speak through its voice to those 'adolescents' who will inhabit a new world and a new time, somewhere beyond the approaching wall of the future"
Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter One Time -- Prologue: Jons the squire -- A great future behind you -- The afterlife of civilizations -- Westernized Modernity -- Chapter Two Otherworlds -- Prologue: Anamorphosis -- Aesthetics and annihilation -- A chance to lie -- Archaic adolescents -- Tetrapharmakon -- Chapter Three Prophetic culture -- Prologue: The enigma -- Stuttering -- The grotesque -- The prophet as a position -- Apocatastasis -- The memory of having forgotten -- Prophecy as therapy of worlding -- Chapter Four Cosmography -- 0/15 - Scheintür -- 1 - The island of facts -- 14 - Consciousness -- 2 - Mundus Imaginalis -- 3 - The world -- 13 - Angel -- 4 - The point-island of the ineffable -- 5 - The dream -- 12 - God -- 6 - The sleeping gods -- 7 - Being -- 11 - Grammar -- 8 - Non-being -- 10 - Death -- 9 - Non-relationality -- Afterword: Sensuous Prophecy By Franco Berardi 'Bifo' -- Bibliography -- Index.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Chapter 1. Time. Prologue: Jons the Squire ; A great future behind you ; The afterlife of civilisations ; Westernised modernity -- Chapter 2. Otherworlds. Prologue: anamorphosis ; Aesthetics and annihilation ; A chance to lie ; Archaic adolescents ; Tetrapharmakon -- Chapter 3. Prophetic culture. Prologue: the enigma ; Stuttering ; The grotesque ; The prophet as a position ; Apocatastasis ; A memory of having forgotten ; Prophecy as therapy of worlding -- Cosmography. 0 / 15 - Scheintür - 1 - The island of facts ; o 14 - Consciousness ; 2 - Mundus imaginalis ; 3 - The world ; o 13 - Angel ; 4 - The point-island of the ineffable ; 5 - The dream ; o 12 - God ; 6 - The sleeping gods ; 7 - Being ; o 11 - Grammar ; 8 - Non-being ; o 10 - Death ; 9 - Non-relationality -- Afterword: Sensuous prophecy / by Franco Berardi 'Bifo'.
Access options:
The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries: