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Introduction

Part One Hegel’s Memnon
Chapter 1. The Figure of History
Chapter 2. Naming Building
Chapter 3. From Memnon to Mnemosyne
Chapter 4. Architecture and the Poetry of Light
Chapter 5. The Architectonic in Time

Part Two Africa and the Idea of Freedom
Chapter 6. The Structure of The Phenomenology of Spirit
Chapter 7. The World Turbaned Upside-Down
Chapter 8. Slavery and the Subject
Chapter 9. Africa, Agency, and Freedom
Chapter 10. The Postcolonial State

Conclusion: Aesthetics and Sovereignty
Bibliography
Index

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The architecture of freedom : Hegel, subjectivity, and the postcolonial state 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
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Through a radical reading of Hegel's oeuvre, The Architecture of Freedom sets forth a theory of open borders centered on a new interpretation of the German philosopher's related conceptions of language and the aesthetic, mastery and servitude, and subjectivity and the state.

The book's argument turns on Hegel's identification of ?Africa? as a fluid, utopic space enabling the traversal of the East-West binary. As Hegel's figure for the non-historical, Africa emerges as the negativity that propels the movement of the dialectic in time.

Mirroring the ?shrouded? continent's relation to history, Kantian ?architectonics? step out of the realm of logic in Hegelian thought and drive the historical unfolding of the aesthetic. In a foundational move, Hegel hypostatizes the aesthetic entanglement of built and linguistic form as the colossus of Memnon, an African warrior memorialized in ancient architecture, myth, and art. Reaching for freedom, the Memnon marks the architectonic modality through which the African slave, at the telos of history, will fulfill the spiritual promise of the human and bring about the politically mature state.

The book examines the syncretic figure of the Memnon and slave across Hegel's lecture courses, the Phenomenology of Spirit, the Encyclopedia, and the Philosophy of Right. Ultimately the book calls for a reassessment of a range of Hegelian philosophemes across disciplines in the humanities. This book will be of particular interest to scholars in philosophy, postcolonial and African studies, political theory, architecture, and historiography.