• 00:58 Words and images
  • 04:32 Signs and symptoms
  • 09:08 Knowledge and not-knowledge
  • 10:31 Being and value
  • 12:35 Definition and comparison
  • 14:52 Lost pieces and remains
  • 17:07 Overexposure and underexposure
  • 18:57 Aesthetics and politics
07/01/2015 21' 45''
English

Georges Didi-Huberman is a philosopher and art historian. He is a lecturer at École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris, where he explores the links between images, words and politics. After his early work on photography and hysteria, Didi-Huberman has gone on to publish more than thirty books about history and the theory of the image, exploring examples that range from the Renaissance to Contemporary Art.

SON[I]A talks to Didi-Huberman about the problems regarding the way in which we see and interpret images, a problematic issue that stems from the definition of what an image is, and from the hierarchy that has historically been imposed on the dialectic between words and images.

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