A decisive key to help grasp some of the essential points of what is
happening around us.
The ninth part of Roberto Calasso's masterwork, The Unnamable Present,
is closely connected with themes of the first book, The Ruin of Kasch
(originally published in 1983, and reissued by FSG in a new
translation). But while Kasch is an enlightened exploration of
modernity, The Unnamable Present propels us into the twenty first
century.
Tourists, terrorists, secularists, fundamentalists, hackers,
transhumanists, algorithmicians: these are all tribes that inhabit the
unnamable present and act on its nervous system. This is a world that
seems to have no living past, but was foreshadowed in the period between
1933 and 1945, when everything appeared bent on self-annihilation. The
Unnamable Present is a meditation on the obscure and ubiquitous process
of transformation happening today in all societies, which makes so many
previous names either inadequate or misleading or a parody of what they
used to mean.
Translated with sensitivity by Calasso's longtime translator, Richard
Dixon, The Unnamable Present is a strikingly original and provocative
vision of our times, from the writer The Paris Review called "a
literary institution of one."