Back to Search Start Over

Author-Matter

Authors :
Sara Marini
Angela Mengoni
Andreas Angelidakis
Mieke Bal
Piotr Barbarewicz
Olivo Barbieri
Francesco Bergamo
Ignacio Borrego Gómez-Pallete
Irene Cazzaro
Pippo Ciorra
Clinicaurbana
Matteo Sartori
Valentino Nicola
Riccardo Miotto
Elena Salvador
Maria Giuseppina Grasso Cannizzo
Andrea Gritti
Dominic Huber
Stefan Kaegi
Rimini Protokoll
Alice Leroy
Luigia Lonardelli
Rafael Lorentz
Sandro Marpillero
Nicolas Martino
Valerio Paolo Mosco
Jonathan Pierini
Marko Pogacnik
Philippe Rahm
Gundula Rakowitz
Eduardo Roig
Francesco Urbano Ragazzi
Francesco Urbano
Francesco Ragazzi
Eric Vautrin
Giorgia Aquilar
Giulia Bersani
Noemi Biasetton
Giovanni Carli
Egidio Cutillo
Giacomo De Caro
Stefano Eger
Alessia Franzese
Elisa Monaci
Arianna Mondin
Andrea Pastorello
Alberto Petracchin
Davide Zaupa
Luca Zilio
Just!Venice
bruno
Sara Marini
Angela Mengoni
Andreas Angelidakis
Mieke Bal
Piotr Barbarewicz
Olivo Barbieri
Francesco Bergamo
Ignacio Borrego Gómez-Pallete
Irene Cazzaro
Pippo Ciorra
Clinicaurbana
Matteo Sartori
Valentino Nicola
Riccardo Miotto
Elena Salvador
Maria Giuseppina Grasso Cannizzo
Andrea Gritti
Dominic Huber
Stefan Kaegi
Rimini Protokoll
Alice Leroy
Luigia Lonardelli
Rafael Lorentz
Sandro Marpillero
Nicolas Martino
Valerio Paolo Mosco
Jonathan Pierini
Marko Pogacnik
Philippe Rahm
Gundula Rakowitz
Eduardo Roig
Francesco Urbano Ragazzi
Francesco Urbano
Francesco Ragazzi
Eric Vautrin
Giorgia Aquilar
Giulia Bersani
Noemi Biasetton
Giovanni Carli
Egidio Cutillo
Giacomo De Caro
Stefano Eger
Alessia Franzese
Elisa Monaci
Arianna Mondin
Andrea Pastorello
Alberto Petracchin
Davide Zaupa
Luca Zilio
Just!Venice
bruno
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The etymology of the word author refers to an act of creation, an act of augmentation, from the Latin verb augere. Author instantiates creation, the expansion of the pre-existing. In 1967 Roland Barthes declared the death of the author in his famous essay to state once more that the crisis is that of the author as a single subjectivity and as a term that condenses prestige, undermined by the de-subjectivation strategies of automatism, fortuity and fragmentation of the historical avant-gardes, as well as by the machinic act and by the reproducibility of the second avant-gardes. Fifty years after Barthes’ paradigmatic formula, this lack of authorship appears to be a successful brand. The tensions between the anomie of matter, the law that establishes authorship and the economy that makes the work possible, invoke discordant perspectives. Artists make the self-destruction of their work the real work, and appeal is made for the demolition of architectures, whether by a recognised author or not, in order to re-design, or better still, re-claim the territory. Artificial intelligence consolidates its logics and its design by progressively shedding human ingenuity. The space of criticism becomes, finally, increasingly ephemeral. However, there is an acceptation of criticism that is, rather than an individual ‘signature’, an exploration and explanation of how design makes theory. The binomial author-matter seeks to mark these tensions and contradictions: the featured term author is maintained to underline the persistence of that prestigious subjectivity, at the very moment when the rhetoric of “matter as an author” promises other forms of authorship.<br />https://www.librarystack.org/author-matter/?ref=unknown

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1376714718
Document Type :
Electronic Resource