Alexander García Düttmann: Schönheit der Student*innen
Prof. Dr. Alexander García Düttmann is
professor for philosophical aesthetics, philosophy of art, cultural theory and art theory at the Universität der Künste (Berlin).
After growing up in Barcelona, Alexander García Düttmann studied in Frankfurt am Main with Alfred
Schmidt and in Paris with Jacques Derrida. He has taught at Stanford University, The University of Essex, Monash University,
New York University, Middlesex University, Goldsmiths College, and the Royal College of Art. In 2011, he published Participation:
Awareness of Semblance (Konstanz University Press), an attempt to make sense of the concept of participation, especially
in relation to art and politics. In 2012, García Düttmann published Naive Art: An Essay on Happiness (August
Verlag), a series of fragments set in San Francisco. Happiness, the author contends, lies in the creation of everyday habits
that allow one to conceive of an idea and break with established conventions. In 2015, García Düttmann published What
Does Art Know? For An Aesthetics Of Resistance (Konstanz University Press). In this book, he claims that art is
a form of thinking and that for this reason it does not produce knowledge. Alexander García Düttmann has translated some of
Derrida's works into German, and Benjamin's essay on Julien Green into French. He has also edited Theory and Practice,
an unpublished seminar by Jacques Derrida on Marx (Éditions Galilée 2017).What is Contemporary Art? On Political Ideology
(Konstanz University Press) appeared in 2017, Love Machine. The Origin of the Work of Art (Konstanz University Press)
in 2018.