
Name and Image
An Essay on Walter Benjamin
Gianni Carchia(Author)
Seagull Books London Ltd (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 21. October 2025
Book
Hardback
275 pages
978-1-80309-405-2 (ISBN)
Description
An insightful study of Walter Benjamin, one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century, by the Italian philosopher Gianni Carchia.
Name and Image crystalizes Gianni Carchia's lifelong pursuit of the infinite philosophical object in the method and thought of one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century: Walter Benjamin. This intellectual biography touches upon the philosophy of language, historiography, aesthetics, temporality, and transcendental philosophy.
The book has the singular distinction of being both Gianni Carchia's first and last work. In the spring of 1999, shortly before the resurgence of the disease that would lead to his death, Carchia began revising the graduate thesis he had defended at the University of Turin in 1971 with the title Truth and Language in the Young Walter Benjamin. At age twenty-four, the young scholar already demonstrated the incisive, axiomatic style of a master. The final version, retitled Name and Image, would become his testament. With a remarkable inversion, beginning and end seem to conjoin here in an authentically philosophical act, as though all the motifs of Carchia's late thought-the conception of philosophy as event and witness, critique of method, and messianic finality-resonated together for the first time in this youthful text. The physiognomy of Benjamin that opens the work is the self-portrait of a figure who stands out ever more as one of the most just voices in twentieth-century Italian philosophy.
Name and Image crystalizes Gianni Carchia's lifelong pursuit of the infinite philosophical object in the method and thought of one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century: Walter Benjamin. This intellectual biography touches upon the philosophy of language, historiography, aesthetics, temporality, and transcendental philosophy.
The book has the singular distinction of being both Gianni Carchia's first and last work. In the spring of 1999, shortly before the resurgence of the disease that would lead to his death, Carchia began revising the graduate thesis he had defended at the University of Turin in 1971 with the title Truth and Language in the Young Walter Benjamin. At age twenty-four, the young scholar already demonstrated the incisive, axiomatic style of a master. The final version, retitled Name and Image, would become his testament. With a remarkable inversion, beginning and end seem to conjoin here in an authentically philosophical act, as though all the motifs of Carchia's late thought-the conception of philosophy as event and witness, critique of method, and messianic finality-resonated together for the first time in this youthful text. The physiognomy of Benjamin that opens the work is the self-portrait of a figure who stands out ever more as one of the most just voices in twentieth-century Italian philosophy.
Reviews / Votes
"Carchia's name is rightfully included in the list of the few names that count in Italian thought of the last thirty years alongside those of Giorgio Colli, Furio Jesi, Enzo Melandri." * Giorgio Agamben * "Gianni had a 'mysterious' gift: he was able to imagine the philosopher . . . . He was able to put her into images as if to paint her." * Massimo Cacciari *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Greenford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
399 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-80309-405-2 (9781803094052)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Gianni Carchia (1947-2000) was one of the most important and original Italian philosophers of the past century. His research ranged from aesthetics to ancient philosophy, from anthropology to political philosophy. Thomas Haskell Simpson is associate professor in the Department of French and Italian at Northwestern University and a translator of many works from Italian.
Content
Criticism and Truth
Towards a Philosophy of Language
The Problem of History
Conclusion: Toward a Philosophy of the Informal
Chronology of the Life and Work of Walter Benjamin.
Critical History
Bibliography
Towards a Philosophy of Language
The Problem of History
Conclusion: Toward a Philosophy of the Informal
Chronology of the Life and Work of Walter Benjamin.
Critical History
Bibliography