Saturday, November 20, 2010

Theodor Adorno: Dying Today


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Street view: a series of unfortunate events #5: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010



The less subjects live anymore, the more abrupt, frightening, the death.





Street view: a series of unfortunate events #7: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010


...without power over it and ridiculous before it...




Street view: a series of unfortunate events #51: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010


Death and history... form a constellation.




Street view: a series of unfortunate events #23: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010




... the downfall of the individual brings down the entire construction of bourgeois existence along with it...





Street view: a series of unfortunate events #1: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010



Hence the constant panic in the sight of death.






Street view: a series of unfortunate events #23: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010



Death as such, or as a biological Ur-phenomenon, is not to be extracted out of the coils of history...





Street view: a series of unfortunate events #14: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010

...the form, by which the consciousness comes to grips with death,

varies along with the concrete
conditions of how one dies...




Street view: a series of unfortunate events #30: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010


What death does to what is socially condemned, is anticipated biologically in beloved human beings of great age;





Street view: a series of unfortunate events #34: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010


not only their bodies but their ego,

everything which
determines them as human beings,

crumbles without illness and violent intervention.






Street view: a series of unfortunate events #33: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010


The comforting faith, that in such disintegration or madness the core of the human being would continue to exist,
has, in its indifference towards that experience, something foolish and cynical about it.




Street view: a series of unfortunate events #35: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010


Whoever turns away from what negated their possible fulfillment, pulls a face at the metaphysical need.


Street view: a series of unfortunate events #38: photo by Michael Wolf, 2010



Theodor Adorno: Dying Today, from Negative Dialectics (1966) (edited excerpts), translated by Michael Redmond, 2001