SKU: rem006510
$19.98
Best-selling author and philosopher Umberto Eco is currently
resident at the Louvre, and his chosen theme of study is "the vertigo of
lists." Reflecting on this enormous trove of human achievements, in his
lyrical intellectual style he has embarked on an investigation of the
phenomenon of cataloging and collecting. This book, featuring lavish
reproductions of artworks from the Louvre and other world-famous
collections, is a philosophical and artistic sequel to Eco’s recent
acclaimed books, History of Beauty and On Ugliness, books in
which he delved into the psychology, philosophy, history, and art of
human forms. Eco is a modern-day Diderot, and here he examines the
Western mind’s predilection for list-making and the encyclopedic. His
central thesis is that in Western culture a passion for accumulation is
recurring: lists of saints, catalogues of plants, collections of art.
This impulse has recurred through the ages from music to literature to
art. Eco refers to this obsession itself as a "giddiness of lists" but
shows how in the right hands it can be a "poetics of catalogues." From
medieval reliquaries to Andy Warhol’s compulsive collecting, Umberto Eco
reflects in his inimitably inspiring way on how such catalogues mirror
the spirit of their times. Now Only $19.98
Price: $19.98
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