"Adorno's lectures provide a fascinating glimpse into the philosophical workshop where his ideas were forged and developed, and this lecture course on aesthetics from the late 1950s is no exception. With an irrepressible sense of intellectual adventure, Adorno argues with the giants of the German tradition in the philosophy of art, interprets Plato's theory of beauty in the <i>Phaedrus</i>, and struggles to make sense of the music of John Cage. He offers a virtuoso series of variations on his central claim that, in art, we experience reason 'in the form of its otherness', as a 'particular resistance' to the instrumental rationality which dominates our lives."<br /> <b>Peter Dews, University of Essex</b> <br /><br /> "These lectures are much more than an early record of Adorno's path toward his late, uncompleted masterwork, <i>Aesthetic Theory</i>. They represent an independent and often revelatory statement of his thinking on aesthetics in the late 1950's. This book is an indispensable addition to the English-language reader's understanding of this central thinker."<br /> <b>Michael Jennings, Princeton University</b>