We like to imagine ourselves as rational beings who think and speak, yet to live means first and foremost to look, taste, feel, or smell the world around us. But sensibility is not just a faculty: We are sensible objects bot...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

We like to imagine ourselves as rational beings who think and speak, yet to live means first and foremost to look, taste, feel, or smell the world around us. But sensibility is not just a faculty: We are sensible objects both to ourselves and to others, and our life is through and through a sensible life.

This book, now translated into five languages, rehabilitates sensible existence from its marginalization at the hands of modern philosophy, theology, and politics. Coccia begins by defining the ontological status of images. Not just an internal modification of our consciousness, an image has an intermediate ontological status that differs from that of objects or subjects. The book's second part explores our interactions with images in dream, fashion, and biological facts like growth and generation. Our life, Coccia argues, is the life of images.

Similar Products

The Use of Bodies (Meridian: Crossing Aesthetics)Writing of the Formless: José Lezama Lima and the End of Time (Lit Z FUP)Capitalist Realism: Is there no alternative? (Zero Books)Notes on the Cinematograph (New York Review Books Classics)Aurality: Listening and Knowledge in Nineteenth-Century Colombia (Sign, Storage, Transmission)Immaterialism: Objects and Social Theory (Theory Redux)Notes Toward a Performative Theory of Assembly (Mary Flexner Lectures of Bryn Mawr College)Heidegger: The Question of Being and History (The Seminars of Jacques Derrida)Ponderings II-VI: Black Notebooks 1931-1938 (Studies in Continental Thought)