Events > Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”
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MAR 1, 2014 SAT 15:00–16:30

Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy]

  • Lecture

Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”

Masaki Nakamasa

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* This event has already taken place. Read report


The following Access Program will be presented in connection with Prelude [Exhibition] William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time and as part of Parasophia’s Public Program.

Masaki Nakamasa (仲正昌樹)
Professor, Human and Socio-Environmental Studies, Kanazawa University Graduate School. Born 1963. PhD, Department of Area Studies, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo. Nakamasa is especially known for his critical analyses of various contemporary social and political topics from a philosophical perspective, with a focus on freedom, justice, law, publicness, and common good. Publications include Shūchū kōgi! Nihon no gendai shisō: Posutomodan towa nandattanoka [Intensive course: Japanese postmodernism] (Tokyo: NHK Publishing, 2006), Ima koso Ārento wo yominaosu [Rethinking Hannah Arendt] (Tokyo: Kodansha, 2009), Varutā Ben’yamin: “Kiki” no jidai no shisōka wo yomu [Walter Benjamin: Reading the thinker of the age of “crisis”] (Tokyo: Sakuhinsha, 2011), Ima wo ikiru tame no shisō kīwādo [Critical keywords for survival in contemporary society] (Tokyo: Kodansha, 2011), and Kiki no shigaku: Herudarin, sonzai to gengo [The poetics of crisis: Hölderlin, being and language] (Tokyo: Sakuhinsha, 2012).

  • Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”

  • Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”
  • Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”
  • Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”
  • Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”
Title
Prelude: Access Program [Social Philosophy] Masaki Nakamasa “Philosophical Consideration on the ‘Time of Art’: Implications of ‘Time Experience’ in the Discourses of Heidegger, Benjamin, and Other German Thinkers”
Lecturer
Masaki Nakamasa (Professor, Human and Socio-Environmental Studies, Kanazawa University Graduate School)
Date
Saturday, March 1, 2014 3:00–4:30 PM
Place
Study Room (Woodshop classroom, 1F), former Rissei Elementary School
310-2 Bizenjima-cho, Nakagyo-ku, Kyoto 604-8023 (south of Kiyamachi and Takoyakushi)
* Hankyu Kyoto Line: 3 min. walk north from Exit 1a, Kawaramachi Station
* Keihan Main Line: 5 min. walk northwest from Exits 4 or 5, Gion-Shijō Station
* No parking available. (Paid parking lot for bicycles located near venue.)
Language
Japanese
Seats available
40 seats
Admission
Free
Reservations
Required
Presented by
Kyoto International Festival of Contemporary Culture Organizing Committee, Kyoto Association of Corporate Executives (Kyoto Keizai Doyukai), Kyoto Prefecture, Kyoto City
Related exhibition
Prelude [Exhibition] William Kentridge: The Refusal of Time
Auditorium, former Rissei Elementary School
Saturday, February 8 – Sunday, March 16, 2014