
Architecture, Philosophy and the Pedagogy of Cinema
From Benjamin to Badiou
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Book Description
Philosophers on the art of cinema mainly remain silent about architecture. Discussing cinema as ‘mass art’, they tend to forget that architecture, before cinema, was the only existing ‘mass art’. In this work author Nadir Lahiji proposes that the philosophical understanding of the collective human sensorium in the apparatus of perception must once again find its true training ground in architecture.
Building art puts the collective mass in a position of ‘expert critic’, who identifies themselves with the technical apparatus. Only then can architecture regain its status as ‘mass art’ and, as the book contends, only then can it resume its function as the only ‘artform’ that is designed for the political pedagogy of masses, which originally belonged to it in modernity before the invention of cinema.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgment
Foreword: Todd McGowan
Afterword: Graeme Gilloch
Preface
Architecture After Cinema
Introduction
Architecture at the ‘End’ of Cinema
ONE
Returning to Philosophy of Masses: Benjamin and Badiou
TWO
From the Photographic Moment of Critical Philosophy to the Optical Unconscious
THREE
Mass Art and Impurity: Reading Benjamin with Badiou
FOUR
In and Out of Plato’s Cave
FIVE
Theory of Distraction: Tactile and Optical
SIX
Poverty of Experience
SEVEN
Dialectics and Mass Art
EIGHT
The Proletarian Mise-en-Scène
EPILOGUE
The Art of the Masses in the Age of Pornography
Index
Author(s)
Biography
Nadir Lahiji is an architect. He holds a Ph.D. in architecture theory from the University of Pennsylvania. He is most recently the author of Architecture or Revolution: Emancipatory Critique after Marx (Routledge, 2020) and An Architecture Manifesto: Critical Reason and Theories of a Failed Practice (Routledge, 2019). His previous publications include, among others, Adventures with the Theory of the Baroque and French Philosophy, and the co-authored The Architecture of Phantasmagoria: Specters of the City.
Reviews
"Articulated with rare philosophical intelligence and political incisiveness, Nadir Lahiji’s new book proposes architecture as the preeminent art of the masses, one that is closer to cinema than to the other arts. A training ground for our wider confrontations with a technological capitalist modernity, architecture emerges once again as the best hope for a political pedagogy of the masses and for the formation of new political subjectivities. Brilliantly reading Walter Benjamin with Alain Badiou, psychoanalytic criticism with film theory, Architecture, Philosophy and the Pedagogy of Cinema summons us to rethink the very project of architectural production today."
David Cunningham, Institute for Modern and Contemporary Culture, University of Westminster
"A seminal contribution to the political philosophy of architecture that extends, updates, and actualises some of Benjamin’s most far-reaching reflections on the crisis of perception towards a new perspective on architecture's as a `mass art` in the time of digital capitalism, after the end of cinema. For sheer intellectual stimulation, few can match Lahiji’s inquisitive probing of architecture’s contemporary predicament."
Libero Andreotti, Professor Emeritus of Architecture, Georgia Tech
"Architecture, Philosophy and Pedagogy of Cinema: From Benjamin to Badiou puts forward the challenging case for architecture as the only living mass art with revolutionary political potential. Nadir Lahiji argues persuasively that the emergence of the masses as ‘historical subject’ is aided by a radical restructuring of perception; as cinema in the modern period reshaped the social imaginary, so architecture can perform this role today."
Christopher Kul-Want, Course Leader MRes Art Theory & Philosophy, Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts, London