
Accident
A Philosophical and Literary History
Ross Hamilton(Author)
University of Chicago Press
Published on 18. February 2008
Book
Hardback
320 pages
978-0-226-31484-6 (ISBN)
Description
An accidental glance at a newspaper notice causes Rousseau to collapse under the force of a vision. A car accidentally hits Giacometti, and he experiences an epiphany. Darwin introduces accident to the basic process of life, and Freud looks to accident as the expression of unconscious desire. Accident, Ross Hamilton claims, is the force that makes us modern. Tracing the story of accident from Aristotle to Buster Keaton and beyond, Hamilton's daring book revives the tradition of the grand history of ideas. "Accident" tells an original history of Western thought from the perspective of Aristotle's remarkably durable categories of accident and substance. Throughout antiquity and the Middle Ages, Aristotle's distinction under-wrote an insistence on order and subordination of the inessential. In a groundbreaking innovation, Hamilton argues that after the Reformation, the concept of accident began to change places with that of substance: accident became a life-transforming event and effectively a person's essence. For moderns, it is the accidental, seemingly trivial moments of consciousness that, like Wordsworth's "spots of time," create constellations of meaning in our lives.
Touching on a broad array of images and texts - Augustine, Dante, the frescoes of Raphael, Descartes, Jane Austen, the work of the surrealists, and twentieth-century cinema - Hamilton provides a new way to map the mutations of personal identity and subjectivity.
Touching on a broad array of images and texts - Augustine, Dante, the frescoes of Raphael, Descartes, Jane Austen, the work of the surrealists, and twentieth-century cinema - Hamilton provides a new way to map the mutations of personal identity and subjectivity.
Reviews / Votes
"Accident is interesting and instructive, entirely original in its argument, and likely to have an impact in literary studies, which are concerned at the present time with notions of identity of the subject - what literary critics used to call 'character.' It is a book that reads modernity as modernity demands to be read: in historical depth." - Gordon Teskey, Harvard University"More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Chicago
United States
Publishing group
The University of Chicago Press
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
6 halftones
Dimensions
Height: 239 mm
Width: 163 mm
Weight
600 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-226-31484-6 (9780226314846)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
02/2021
1st Edition
University of Chicago Press
€44.40
Available for download
Person
Ross Hamilton is associate professor of English at Barnard College.