Home
:
Book details
:
Book description
Description of
Apropos of Something: A History of Irrelevance and Relevance
A history of the idea of relevance since the nineteenth century in art, criticism, philosophy, logic, and social thought. Before 1800 nothing was irrelevant. So argues Elisa Tamarkins sweeping meditation on a key shift in consciousness: the arrival of relevance as the means to grasp how something that was once disregarded, unvalued, or lost to us becomes interesting and important. When so much makes claims to our attention every day, how do we decide what is most valuable right now? Relevance, Tamarkin shows, was an Anglo-American concept, derived from a word meaning to raise or to lift up again, and also to give relief. It engaged major intellectual figures, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and pragmatists and philosophersWilliam James, Alain Locke, John Dewey, and Alfred North Whiteheadas well as a range of critics, phenomenologists, linguists, and sociologists. Relevance is a struggle for recognition, especially in the worlds of literature, art, and criticism. Poems and paintings in the nineteenth century could now be seen as pragmatic works that Read more