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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Carl Einstein , Charles W HaxthausenPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press ISBN: 9780226464138ISBN 10: 022646413 Pages: 408 Publication Date: 16 October 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsIn his partisan confrontation with the art of his brutal and exhilarating age, Einstein relentlessly tested the limits of language and self-knowledge. The opportunity to wrestle with his commitment to modernism's radical alterity and to reckon honestly with his critical failures may well offer us one avenue of salvation from the resurgence of identitarian ideologies today. Haxthausen's erudite translation is a gift for all who continue to feel the deep necessity of art and who struggle with its power to transform our vision of the world. A breathtaking accomplishment of great literary and theoretical imagination. --Megan R. Luke, University of Southern California This essential collection of Einstein's writing gives a lucid account of his life and evolving thought, with many texts being made available in English for the first time. Haxthausen clearly explains the idiosyncratic terminology and language that Einstein uses in a variety of texts that range from his critical analysis of cubism to the colonialist foundations of ethnographic collecting. He also validates Einstein's role in the foundation of Documents (1929-30), the French journal that countered the prevailing arguments of surrealism in art and literature of the time. --Marilyn McCully, cocurator of Tableaux magiques, Musee national Picasso-Paris, 2019 Einstein was an extraordinary figure--groundbreaking author on African art, abstraction, Picasso, Braque, and Klee; close collaborator of Georges Bataille on the transformative journal Documents; brilliant exegete of prehistory; and bold practitioner of experimental literature that anticipates contemporary autofiction. Einstein lived modernism so fully that its double demand for aesthetic freedom and political commitment effectively tore him apart. Expertly introduced by Charles Haxthausen, this volume presents, for the first time for an Anglophone readership, an extensive selection of writings by one of the greatest thinkers of twentieth-century art and culture.--Hal Foster, Townsend Martin 1917 Professor of Art & Archaeology, Princeton University Author InformationCarl Einstein (1885-1940), active primarily as an art critic in Germany and later in France, left a rich corpus of writings encompassing literary criticism, drama, poetry, fiction, and politics. Charles W. Haxthausen is the Robert Sterling Clark Professor, Emeritus of Art History at Williams College. He is co-editor of Berlin: Culture and Metropolis and editor of The Two Art Histories: The Museum and the University and Sol LeWitt: The Well-Tempered Grid. He has been named Distinguished Scholar at the Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art at the Metropolitan Museum for 2019-20. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |