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  • The Illegitimate Age ? Aesthetics and Political Theology: Aesthetics and Political Theology

    The Illegitimate Age ? Aesthetics and Political Theology by Vercellone, Federico; Valgenti, Robert T.; Esposito, Roberto;

    Aesthetics and Political Theology

    Series: Outspoken; 7;

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    13 153 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher John Wiley & Sons
    • Date of Publication 30 June 2025

    • ISBN 9780228024491
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages174 pages
    • Size 216x140x15 mm
    • Weight 666 g
    • Language English
    • 700

    Categories

    Short description:

    Through an analysis of the katechon myth ? a withholding power that contains the very evil it restrains ? The Illegitimate Age reveals an aesthetic lens through which to interpret the legitimacy of political power, the appeal of populism, and the role of the image in current society.

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    Long description:

    Our age ? saturated with media images and ever-present political crises ? traces back to the beginning of Christianity and its messianic vision of the world. In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, our sense of time and history has become apocalyptic.


    In The Illegitimate Age Federico Vercellone explains contemporary affinities for both apocalypse and media imagery from the perspective of political theology, drawing from St Paul?s mysterious figure of the katechon ? the withholding power that prevents the arrival of the Antichrist and the end of times while also delaying the Messiah, therefore containing the very evil it restrains. Vercellone highlights representation as a crucial aspect of the katechon myth, finding within it the roots of current political and aesthetic forms. In the context of contemporary populism, charismatic leaders build their power on presumed prestige, mimicry of sacred figures, and pandering invocations of kitsch, all recurrent aspects of the katechon and Antichrist trope in Western art and history. Political power, Vercellone argues, has been deeply aestheticized, and the path that led us here was laid long before mass media, mass consumption, and our society of the spectacle.


    A new interpretation of the political and aesthetic categories first suggested by Carl Schmitt, Walter Benjamin, and Jean Baudrillard, The Illegitimate Age turns a fresh lens on the legitimacy of political power, the appeal of populism, and the role of the image in our society.



    ?The Illegitimate Age is a remarkable work of political, theological, and aesthetic synthesis that take the existing debate around the katechon into new territory.? Arthur Bradley, Lancaster University

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