Shop > Artists' Books

Out of Stock
#05254

Quentin Meillassoux: The Number and the Siren

Artist
Quentin Meillassoux
Date
2011
Publisher
Sequence Press
Format
Artists' Books
Details
Softcover
ISBN
978-0-9832169-2-6
Size
12 × 17.5 × 1.8 cm
Length
306 
Description

A meticulous literary study, a detective story à la Edgar Allan Poe, a treasure hunt worthy of an adventure novel – such are the registers in which will be deciphered the hidden secrets of a poem like no other. Quentin Meillassoux continues his innovative philosophical interrogation of the concepts of chance, contingency, infinity and eternity through a concentrated study of Stéphane Mallarmé’s poem Un Coup de Dés jamais n’abolira le Hasard, patiently deciphering its enigmatic meaning on the basis of a dazzlingly simple and lucid insight with regard to ‘the unique Number that cannot be another’.

The Coup de dés constitutes perhaps the most radical break in the history of modern poetry: the fractured lines spanning the double page; the typographical play borrowed from the poster form; the multiple interpolations disrupting reading. But the intrigue of this poem is still stranger and has always resisted full elucidation. We encounter a shipwreck, and a Master, himself almost submerged, who clasps in his hand the dice that, confronted by the furious waves, he hesitates to throw. The hero expects this throw, if it takes place, to be extraordinarily important: a Number said to be ‘unique’ and which ‘cannot be any other’.

The decisive point of the investigation proposed by Meillassoux comes with a discovery, unsettling and yet as simple as a child’s game: All the dimensions of the Number, understood progressively, articulate between them but a sole condition – that this Number should ultimately be delivered to us by a secret code, hidden in the Coup de dés, like a key that finally unlocks every one of its poetic devices. Thus is also unveiled the meaning of the siren that emerges for a lightning flash among the debris of the shipwreck: as the living heart of a drama that is still unfolding.

With this bold new interpretation of Mallarmé’s work, The Number and the Siren offers provocative insights into modernity, poetics, secularism and religion, and opens a new chapter in Meillassoux’s philosophy of radical contingency.

  1. Quentin Meillassoux: The Number and the Siren
 

Related Items

  1. Andrew McLaren: DCLXVI [printed crossed out], a second treatise on the Number of the Beast (666)
  2. Anri Sala: Ravel Unravel
  3. K8 Hardy, Steve Kado, and Jon McCurley: Prism of Reality, Issue Number 2
  4. Steven Evans: The Number One Song in Heaven
  5. Micah Lexier: A Number of Things
  6. Paul Ryan: Two Is Not a Number, A Conversation with Ayreen Anastas and Rene Gabri
  7. Marco Gastini: Double Page Number 6
  8. ARTFORUMx, Summary:trade edition - Parasitic Ventures Press,
  9. Sam Lewitt: Fluid Employment
  10. Robin Nishio: Wailed
  11. Yishu May/June 2013 Volume 12, Number 3
  12. Istvan Kantor: Media Revolt
  13. Lawrence Weiner: CAUSALITY AFFECTED AND/OR EFFECTED
  14. Sven Augustijnen: Spectres
  15. Robin Cameron and Rochelle Goldberg: Moves 1
  16. Alex Turgeon: 5 Condos
  17. Erkki Kurenniemi
  18. Victor Coleman: ivH
  19. Derek Sullivan: Lynn Valley 8
  20. G.M. Tamás: Innocent Power
  21. Rendezvous
  22. Toronto Builds
  23. Christoph Menke: Aesthetics of Equality
  24. Nicholas Frank: The Sound of the Horn
  25. Ian Wallace: The First documenta, 1955
  26. Anne Moeglin-Delcroix: Ambulo Ergo Sum
  27. Vasarely Go Home
  28. Kenneth Goldsmith: Letter to Bettina Funcke
  29. Notes on Georg Simmel’s Lessons, 1906/07, and on a “Sociology of Art,“ c. 1909
  30. WOOD TWO
  31. Péter György: The Two Kassels
  32. Jessica Williams: Diary
  33. Rainer Ganahl and Johan F. Hartle: DADALENIN
  34. Kevin Immanuel: Michel Foucault Letters
  35. Jalal Toufic: Reading, Rewriting Poe’s “The Oval Portrait“
  36. Journal d’Echo