In their ruminations on Mark Rothko’s Chapel paintings, Leo Bersani and Ulysse Dutoit posit a mode of aesthetic consciousness produced by acts of renunciation. Rothko deliberately relinquishes his paintings’ visibility and thus, like Beckett and Resnais, impoverishes a primary feature of his artistic medium. Bersani and Dutoit’s concept of renunciation undermines modernist medium specificity and points to a form of pseudomorphosis that reveals the fundamental homo-ness between the arts. This speculative essay builds on their argument that such renunciative gestures produce aesthetic models of nondual consciousness and brings Bersani’s later writings into conversation with musical experience. In Bersani’s encounter with Proust and music, musical experience proffers a powerful ego solvent in favor of ontological interpenetration. An attention to music—here, that of Morton Feldman and Joan La Barbara—avers the power of modernism to shatter the modern ego.
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May 1, 2023
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May 01 2023
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Ryan Dohoney
ryan dohoney is a historian of interdisciplinary musical modernism and experimentalism. He is the author of Saving Abstraction: Morton Feldman, the de Menils and the Rothko Chapel (Oxford University Press, 2019) and Morton Feldman: Friendship and Mourning in the New York Avant-Garde (Bloomsbury Academic, 2022). He is an associate professor of musicology in the Bienen School of Music at Northwestern University. He also serves as core faculty in the programs in critical theory and comparative literary studies, and as affiliate faculty in gender and sexuality studies.
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differences (2023) 34 (1): 209–216.
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Ryan Dohoney; Renunciation. differences 1 May 2023; 34 (1): 209–216. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/10407391-10435801
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