The “Adorno Studies Journal” (ASJ) was founded by Martin Shuster and Kathy Kiloh in 2011 to foster inquiry into Adorno’s thought and to make the results of this research available to the scholarly community. After having published three issues, the journal is now ready to resume operation with a different look and feel and new direction under the editorship (in alphabetical order) of Samir Gandesha, Johan F. Hartle, Antonia Hofstätter, Han-Gyeol Lie and Stefano Marino. The new “Journal of Adorno Studies” (JAS) explores the multifaceted work of Th. W. Adorno and its contemporary intellectual, cultural, and political potential. The journal facilitates exchanges between scholars, intellectuals, and artists who think with and against Adorno as much as about Adorno. Taking inspiration from the breadth of Adorno’s work, the Journal’s orientation is explicitly interdisciplinary. The editors encourage critical investigations of art, media, culture, society, politics, and philosophy. The Journal explicitly welcomes contributions on hitherto overlooked areas of engagement within Adorno studies and the Frankfurt School, such as feminism, post-colonial discourse, queer studies, animal studies, the new materialism, etc. The Journal also invites more diverse perspectives from scholars based in regions such as Latin America, East and South Asia, and South Africa.
Marino, S. (In stampa/Attività in corso). Journal of Adorno Studies.
Journal of Adorno Studies
stefano marino
In corso di stampa
Abstract
The “Adorno Studies Journal” (ASJ) was founded by Martin Shuster and Kathy Kiloh in 2011 to foster inquiry into Adorno’s thought and to make the results of this research available to the scholarly community. After having published three issues, the journal is now ready to resume operation with a different look and feel and new direction under the editorship (in alphabetical order) of Samir Gandesha, Johan F. Hartle, Antonia Hofstätter, Han-Gyeol Lie and Stefano Marino. The new “Journal of Adorno Studies” (JAS) explores the multifaceted work of Th. W. Adorno and its contemporary intellectual, cultural, and political potential. The journal facilitates exchanges between scholars, intellectuals, and artists who think with and against Adorno as much as about Adorno. Taking inspiration from the breadth of Adorno’s work, the Journal’s orientation is explicitly interdisciplinary. The editors encourage critical investigations of art, media, culture, society, politics, and philosophy. The Journal explicitly welcomes contributions on hitherto overlooked areas of engagement within Adorno studies and the Frankfurt School, such as feminism, post-colonial discourse, queer studies, animal studies, the new materialism, etc. The Journal also invites more diverse perspectives from scholars based in regions such as Latin America, East and South Asia, and South Africa.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


