Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
: At the peak of her reflection on freedom (“freedom is experienced
in the process of acting and nothing else”), H. Arendt writes that
freedom is initium (“to act is essentially to begin”) and that the beginnings
nowadays possible are those that religion and poetry, through out
modernity, have saved from political experiences left behind, without
a home, without a place in the traditional political thought. Arendt
delineates a perspective on freedom as retake, as public co-creation of
the incomplete and marginal, to be carried out according to the aesthetical
dynamics of “virtuosism” of the artists who play (“dancers, actors,
musicians and the like”) more than to those of the artists who create.
More than her rapsodical truly aesthetical observations, it’s Arendt’s
interpretation of Dostoevskij’s The Possessed that can shed light on what
she means by co-creation. S. Boym (with his reading of the notion of
co-creation as a task of freedom for our future) and M. Cruz (with his
imperative of a responsive and responsible exercise of memory) inevitably
enter into dialogue with Arendt and with her idea of freedom as
virtuosism of the co-creation.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
R. Salizzoni
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