Posts Tagged ‘The Hedgehog Review’

Posthumanism, memes, and the end of the real

Walter Benjamin called the twentieth century “the age of mechanical reproduction,” but his contemporaries were still capable of distinguishing between a celebrity’s real personality and her image. The twenty-first century is the age of digital reproduction, and it forces us to ask whether the general public still possesses the capacity to recognize such a distinction. Tyler Robinson’s text messages discuss Kirk’s murder with shocking callousness, but Robinson was no psychopath. It would be less frightening if he was. The truly scary prospect is that his blithe indifference to the value of human life is becoming typical. We appear to have entered the realm of the “posthuman.”

Svetlana Alpers on Art and Art History

Perhaps this is why Alpers is befuddled by today’s disciplinary confusion in which art, the master, is subjugated by art history, supposedly its emissary. Consider the following remark she made in a 2022 follow-up to the earlier conversation with Ziegler: “I agree with my great, late art historian friend Michael Podro, who said that painting has self-substance that insulates it from events and changes in the world of things—political, religious, or personal. Painting just goes along.”