- Home
- ACADEMIC
- Philosophy
- Aesthetics
- Maurice Blanchot and the Aesthetics of Hope and Chance
Maurice Blanchot and the Aesthetics of Hope and Chance
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
Can Maurice Blanchot, so often occupied with thoughts of death, dying, affliction, and impossibility, tell us anything about hope? Conversely, can hope tell us anything about Blanchot's project? Blanchot and the Aesthetics of Hope and Chance offers a bold re-reading of Maurice Blanchot by placing two concepts seldom associated with his work – hope and chance – at its centre.
Against the grain of much Blanchot scholarship, Adam Potts argues that Blanchot's project is a writing animated by a paradoxical hope for the Outside: hope directed not toward possibility, but impossibility. Taking Blanchot's definition of impossibility in his essay 'The Great Refusal' – impossibility as thought that reveals itself 'according to a measure other than that of power' – the book claims that hope for the Outside is both an aesthetic and political concern. Specifically, it contends that language which turns away from power becomes oriented toward the Other. In this turn to alterity, chance helps conceptualise what eludes power.
Alongside Blanchot, Potts traces the intimately complex relationship between hope and chance through key moments and figures in its history – from Yves Bonnefoy, Ernst Bloch, Robin D.G. Kelley, and Gabriel Marcel, to Dada, John Cage, Surrealism, and improvised dance. Through comparative thinking and close readings of The Infinite Conversation and The Step Not Beyond, Potts shows how Blanchot unsettles the concepts of hope and chance, favouring a writing that dwells in suspension and anticipation, where chance interrupts mastery and hope refuses fulfilment.
At once philosophically rigorous and creatively adventurous, Maurice Blanchot and the Aesthetics of Hope and Chance reframes Blanchot as a writer whose work is propelled by a strange, restless, and generative hope – capable of transforming how we understand literature, politics, and experimental practice.
Accessibility Information
Additional accessibility information
- PDF/UA-2, 1.4
- accessibility@bloomsbury.com
Hazards
The publication contains no hazards
Support for non-visual reading
Has alternative text descriptions for images
Navigation
- Page list to go to pages from the print source version
- Elements such as headings, tables, etc for structured navigation
- All or substantially all textual matter is arranged in a single logical reading order
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Hope as possibility
Chapter 2: Hope as impossibility
Chapter 3: The aesthetics and politics of hope
Part Two: Chance
Chapter 4: Chance and the impossible project
Chapter 5: A practice of chance
Part Three: The Step
Chapter 6: The second step (not beyond)
Afterword
Product details
| Published | 06 Aug 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 264 |
| ISBN | 9781350424739 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
Hope and chance are not often associated with the writings of Blanchot, but in this book Potts makes their importance and interrelation critical to any understanding of the writer's work. The tension between hope and chance is shown to be the basis of any writer's impossible task, which is equally the possibility of opening to the new, whether artistically or socially. Overall, Maurice Blanchot and the Aesthetics of Hope and Chance is a very significant work that opens new pathways to understanding Blanchot's writings and the creative work as such.
William S. Allen, researcher at the University of Southampton, UK, and author of Illegibility: Blanchot and Hegel (Bloomsbury, 2021)
-
The idea of writing, or a practice of art, that seeks to emerge from the suspension of subjectivity and control presents a complex field much neglected in philosophy and aesthetics. In a brilliant analysis Adam Potts' response is to carefully weave together two interrelated ideas in the work of Blanchot: hope and chance, while keeping in play a certain ethics. These are related to a third term: 'the Outside' - the absolutely other which resists assimilation to the same - an 'unmooring' in an abyssal deferral of meaning. Hope (as distinct from optimism) is a non-teleological affirmation of the subject's suspended temporality and relation to the Outside. Chance, radical chance, not as mere randomness of nature, nor reduction to technique, presents a 'rupture in thought itself,' signalling the impossible.
Ian Andrews, Lecturer in Media Art, University of New South Wales, Australia
-
This is a novel and valuable study, drawing Blanchot into conversation with sound studies and music in a manner faithful to the experimentation that, Adam Potts argues, is central to this most enigmatic of thinkers. Potts persuasively argues for the importance of little-noticed Blanchotian themes of hope, chance and the 'second step' as illuminative of the aesthetic and political stakes of a surprising breadth of creative practitioners, encompassing jazz co-operative AACM, dancer and choreographer Léa Tirabasso and composer-theorist John Cage.
Lars Iyer, Professor of Creative Writing at Newcastle University, UK
























