Publication announcement: Baroque Modernity: An Aesthetics of Theater (Joseph Cermatori '05)

Available for pre-order here:
https://jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu/title/baroque-modernity

Coming to bookstores November 16, 2021: a groundbreaking study on the vital role of baroque theater in shaping modernist philosophy, literature, and performance.

Winner of the American Comparative Literature Association's 2021 Helen Tartar First Book Award.

Reviews:

“This wondrous work shows that modernism has been mistakenly and consequentially contrasted with the baroque in the service of a secularization narrative and a progressive narrative of periodization. The florid pre-history of spare modernism turns out never fully to fall away and, in Cermatori's splendid account, even the queer theoretical distinction between performative speech acts and theatricality turns out to be a result of that disavowal—and return—of the baroque. A brilliant and unsettling book!”
– Judith Butler, University of California, Berkeley
Author of The Force of Non-Violence: An Ethico-Political Bind

“Cermatori's book has the advantage of proceeding from a fact that is both readily acknowledged and traditionally undertheorized: that the quality of being ‘baroque’ still exerts tremendous conceptual thrall over the aesthetic production of modernity. Baroque Modernity is a deeply necessary and timely intervention—a genuine tour de force.”
– Adrian Daub, Stanford University
Author of Four-Handed Monsters: Four-Hand Piano Playing and Nineteenth Century Culture

“Highly intelligent, lucid, and elegantly wrought, Baroque Modernity enlivens the history it describes and speaks to epistemological concerns. Cermatori has a good eye and ear for the languages of the stage, amply demonstrated in his discussion of baroquely modernist spectacle, a counter-Wagnerian take on total theater.”
– Spencer Golub, Brown University
Author of Heidegger and Future Presencing (The Black Pages)

“Revelatory in both local detail and overall conception, Baroque Modernity realigns theatrical modernism’s relationship to its past. It also secures its future place of importance in the renovated scholarship on modernism writ large. Four deeply researched case studies—of Nietzsche, Mallarmé, Benjamin, and Stein—anchor a broad range of expansive insights into modernism’s insufficiently acknowledged “pro-theatricality,” and Joseph Cermatori has written them in a compelling style that evokes the aesthetic qualities of the baroque itself—expressive, complex, daring, exuberant, and epiphanic.”
– Joseph Roach, Yale University
Author of Cities of the Dead: Circum-Atlantic Performance

Writer and journalist Jordan Salama '19 publishes his first book, EVERY DAY THE RIVER CHANGES: FOUR WEEKS DOWN THE MAGDALENA

Writer and journalist Jordan Salama '19 publishes his first book, EVERY DAY THE RIVER CHANGES: FOUR WEEKS DOWN THE MAGDALENA, an exhilarating travelogue for a new generation about a journey along Colombia’s Río Magdalena, exploring life by the banks of a majestic river now at risk, and how a country recovers from conflict.

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Alert to all Friends of Theatre Intime!

Like many of you, the Théâtre Intime/Princeton Summer Theater anniversary committee has been anxiously paying attention to the latest health developments both across the country and at the Best Old Place of All. Our top priorities remain ensuring the safety of all alumni and current students while also hoping to find a way to celebrate the incredible milestones of these two amazing sister theater companies.

With that in mind, we are now able to (tentatively) announce that the celebration has been rescheduled for the weekend of November 3-6, 2022. Again, this is subject to change, but we are firmly of the opinion that these dates will stick.

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