The Signature of All Things is Giorgio Agamben's
sustained reflection on method. To reflect on method
implies for Agamben an archaeological vigilance: a
persistent form of thinking in order to expose, examine,
and elaborate what is obscure, unanalyzed, even unsaid,
in an author's thought. To be archaeologically vigilant,
then, is to return to, even invent, a method attuned to
a ''world supported by a thick weave of resemblances and
sympathies, analogies and correspondences.'' Collecting
a wide range of authors and topics in a slim but richly
argued volume, Agamben enacts the search to create a
science of signatures that exceeds the attempts of
semiology and hermeneutics to determine the pure and
unmarked signs that signify univocally, neutrally, and
eternally. Three conceptual figures organize Agamben's
argument and the advent of his new method: the paradigm,
the signature, and archaeology. Each chapter is devoted
to an investigation of one of these concepts and Agamben
carefully constructs its genealogy transhistorically and
from an interdisciplinary perspective.And at each moment
of the text, Agamben pays tribute to Michel Foucault,
whose methods he rethinks and effectively uses to
reformulate the logic of the concepts he isolates. The
Signature of All Things reveals once again why Agamben
is one of the most innovative thinkers writing
today. |
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