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TABOO: THE ACTUAL MODERNIST AESTHETIC, MADE REAL A ...

TABOO: THE ACTUAL MODERNIST AESTHETIC, MADE REAL A ...

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ejects any teleological argument for historical truth while accepting some limited<br />

concept of truth‘s historicality: ―For Adorno, the present did not receive its meaning from<br />

history; rather, history received its meaning from the present. Not a transcendent and<br />

absolute idea, but the ‗present objective situation of truth‘ was the goal of his critical<br />

inquiry‖ (Buck-Morss 51).<br />

It is here that Adorno‘s plea for a change in perspective in apprehending natural<br />

history is most easily comprehended. Adorno sees a constitutional tension between the<br />

inner logic of material and the course of history. Instead of winnowing one another into a<br />

Hegelian synthesis, material and history can only appear as compositionally entwined<br />

within particular concrete configurations, knowable in the instant of their encounter,<br />

closed to Benjaminian anamnesis and its tacit tethering of materiality with the authority<br />

of the theological symbol. At the same time, this understanding retains the eidetic identity<br />

of Benjamin‘s distinction between classic and modern uses of allegory inasmuch as the<br />

rift that modernist allegorical allusion covers is no longer that of the timeless theological<br />

unity of the symbol, but rather that of the tensions in time that obtain between material<br />

and a collective apprehension of its significance. Adorno‘s is an antiquarianism pointed<br />

towards gathering together the ephemeral ―now‖ as it is indelibly separated from the past.<br />

Buck-Morss leads us to see how history and material are assimilable thoughts in<br />

Adorno‘s ―natural history‖ Kant lecture. She explains that each, nature and history, are<br />

dialectical concepts in their own right, for Adorno. The ramifications of Adorno‘s pairing<br />

of two discrete dialectical concepts together – history and nature – lies in the wild<br />

pullulation beyond all perspectivally conditioned thought that he appoints to the power of<br />

modernist allegory.<br />

166

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