The Remains of the Real

Politics after Postmodernism
Seminars and Colloquia

There was a moment in the 1990’s, in the era of high postmodernism, when it seemed that social reality has had no stable foundations and as such it can be freely and totally transformed by interventions in the registers of symbols and images. Various social, political and economic developments of the last two decades – from 9/11 terrorist attacks to the 2008 financial crisis to the recent populist uprisings on both sides of the Atlantic – blatantly contradict that over-optimist conviction. A lot has been said about what the populists get wrong, what is, however, more puzzling is that they seem to get some things right – as if people had a sort of political blindsight or – to put it in more philosophical terms – as if there was some kind of basic social and political unconcealedness/disclosure (alētheia) where the truth shines through the curtain of lies.

 

Jan Sowa is an Associate Professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, Warsaw. From January to June 2020 he is a Visiting Fellow at the IWM.

Preparatory reading:
Essay by Jan Sowa: The Remains of the Real. Politics after Postmodernism 

Open for external audience.
 

This event was held on ZOOM. The event was recorded for archival purposes and can be published at a later date.
Further technical and data-security guidelines were sent out after the registration.

 

Postponed from March 17, 2020