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OverviewTimes of crisis expose how we experience social, physical, and emotional forms of distance. Alone with Others explores how these experiences overlap, shaping our coexistence. Departing from conventional debates that associate intimacy with affection and distance with alienation, Haustein introduces tact as a particular mode of feeling one's way and making space in the sphere of human interaction. Reconstructing tact's conceptual history from the late eighteenth century to the present, she then focuses on three specific periods of socio-political upheaval: the two World Wars, and 1968. In five reading encounters with Marcel Proust, Helmuth Plessner, Theodor Adorno, François Truffaut, and Roland Barthes, Haustein invites us to reconsider our own ways of engaging with other people, images, and texts, and to gauge the significance of tact today. This title is part of the Flip it Open Programme and may also be available Open Access. Check our website Cambridge Core for details. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Katja Haustein (University of Kent, Canterbury)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press ISBN: 9781009363273ISBN 10: 1009363271 Pages: 179 Publication Date: 04 December 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available, will be POD This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released. Table of Contents1. Tact's History; 2. Proxemics (Proust); 3. Alienation (Plessner – Adorno); 4. Individuation (Truffaut); 5. Approchement (Barthes).Reviews'What does it mean to be tactful? Are there different forms of tact? And is being tactful always a good thing? Katja Haustein explores tact as a means to negotiate between conventions and authenticity. Drawing on the insights of Continental European literature, film, and thought, as well as on recent studies by Richard Sennett and others, she provides a penetrating analysis of this important yet often ignored concept in modern ethics and aesthetics. Lucidly written, historically informed, and philosophically convincing, Alone with Others is both a powerful exercise in intellectual history and a fascinating stimulus to examine our own behaviour.' Henk de Berg, Professor of German, University of Sheffield 'Alone With Others is a book for times of crisis. Through multi-disciplinary engagements with artworks, Katja Haustein re-fashions the idea of tact from a rule book of bourgeois behaviour to a theory of social relation. With a critical palette drawing on moral, political and social philosophy, on semiology and aesthetics, Alone With Others is a book about the relations of distance and proximity needed to resist the excesses of power, and through which to build communities based on understanding and respect.' Timothy Mathews, Emeritus Professor of French and Comparative Criticism, University College London 'Katja Haustein has written an insightful and remarkable addition to the ongoing conversation on the power of tact, which she understands, counterintuitively, as an egalitarian means of engaging with others by keeping our distance. I thoroughly enjoyed disagreeing with this book - and learning from it.' David Caron, Professor of French and Women and Gender Studies, University of Michigan 'Ultimately, 'Alone with Others' understands the works of the writers it examines as variations on an ethics of indirectness. 'Cultivated as the art of making space when we fear colliding, and of bridging gaps when we drift too far away from each other, tact is a mode of being alone with others that exists not to destroy but to protect our societal ways of living together,' Haustein persuasively argues. The encounters she stages in Alone with Others share a preference for individual difference over communal identification and push back against forms of incorporation. The eventual outcome of all this […] is a kind of nonviolent contemplation, viewing one another across a shifting respectful expanse.' Ian Ellison, Los Angeles Review of Books '... after years marked by pandemic-induced isolation and the remapping of personal and collective boundaries, Alone with Others proposes a timely, intriguing examination of the inherent value in distanced contemplation and attentiveness.' Sofia Cumming, The Times Literary Supplement 'Katja Haustein's essay is decisive proof that the value of an argument is not necessarily proportional to its length. In barely more than a hundred pages of tightly written prose, Haustein offers the reader a history of the notion of tact through several centuries, accompanied by close readings of key modern and contemporary thinkers and artists who have foregrounded tact in their work. … This sampling of Katja Haustein's argument should whet the appetite of potential readers interested in how to imagine what post-critical reading and interpretation accomplish and on what grounds they have come to be. The detailed analysis of the individual works in the chapters that unfold in Alone with Others are challenging and revealing and can provide readers, through the notion of tact, with new avenues for understanding modernist ways of interpreting and interacting with others and with the world more broadly speaking.' David F. Bell, Barthes Studies 'Politeness may be thought decorative. … To be tactful, though, touches the substance of the human individual. Katja Haustein has shown what this difference can mean for us as readers - she does so with elegant arguments, concisely, admirably clever but free of any need to show off. … Faced with such clarity of thought, are we any longer to doubt that tactful thinking about tact is a relevant endeavour? Absolutely not! … Let us hope that Haustein's impressive study gives tact a new lease of life in the midst of our scarcely crisis-free times.' Christian Metz, Zeitschrift für Kulturphilosophie 'The more I disagreed, the more I learned, and the more I came to admire this essay on tact.' Suzanne Guerlac, Modern Language Review Author InformationKatja Haustein teaches Comparative Literature at the University of Kent. She was a British Academy Research Fellow at Cambridge University, a Max Weber Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence, and the recipient of a Leverhulme Research Fellowship. She is the author of Regarding Lost Time: Photography, Identity, and Affect in Proust, Benjamin, and Barthes (2012). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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