Book Description
This book considers Derrida's reading of literature as a form of philosophical thinking.
Author : Timothy Clark
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 244 pages
File Size : 32,76 MB
Release : 1992-07-31
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0521405394
This book considers Derrida's reading of literature as a form of philosophical thinking.
Author : Joanna Hodge
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 273 pages
File Size : 16,27 MB
Release : 2007-09-12
Category : Education
ISBN : 1134085095
This is a comprehensive investigation into the theme of time in the work of Jacques Derrida, showing how temporality is one of the hallmarks of his thought. Joanna Hodge compares and contrasts Derrida's arguments concerning time with those of Kant, Husserl, Augustine, Heidegger, Levinas, Freud, and Blanchot.
Author : Leslie Hill
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 12,30 MB
Release : 2010
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780268031077
Hill is concerned with the idea of the future in literary texts, and how notions of the future are essential to their very existence.
Author : Ilai Rowner
Publisher : U of Nebraska Press
Page : 327 pages
File Size : 32,30 MB
Release : 2015-01-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0803245858
What is an event? From a philosophical perspective, events are irregular occurrences—moments of change and interruption—categorized by human perception, language, and thought. While philosophers have pored over the subject of events extensively in recent years, The Event: Literature and Theory seeks to ground it: What is literature’s approach to the event? How does literature produce and give testimony to events? Ilai Rowner’s study not only revisits some of the most important thinkers of our time, including Maurice Blanchot, Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Derrida, and Martin Heidegger, it also develops a critical approach to literature that questions the meaning of the literary event through examinations of literary works by Marcel Proust, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, and T. S. Eliot. Rowner offers a new method of thinking about the particular characteristics of the event within literary works and defines the creative value of literature as the aspiration toward the un-happening within the happening. In this study the experience of literature—as an act of both writing and reading—becomes the struggle to capture the excessive movement of the event while also revealing the creative energy within that work of literature.
Author : Ethan Kleinberg
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Page : 316 pages
File Size : 25,27 MB
Release : 2005
Category : Existentialism
ISBN : 9780801443916
Kleinberg offers new insights into intellectual figures whose influence on modern French philosophy has been enormous, including some whose thought remains under-explored outside France.
Author : Rodolphe Gasché
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 404 pages
File Size : 28,7 MB
Release : 1999
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780804736770
Om begreppet relation, främst inom fenomenologisk och existentialistisk filosofi.
Author : Sarah Hammerschlag
Publisher : Columbia University Press
Page : 270 pages
File Size : 22,85 MB
Release : 2016-08-30
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 0231542135
Over a span of thirty years, twentieth-century French philosophers Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida held a conversation across texts. Sharing a Jewish heritage and a background in phenomenology, both came to situate their work at the margins of philosophy, articulating this placement through religion and literature. Chronicling the interactions between these thinkers, Sarah Hammerschlag argues that the stakes in their respective positions were more than philosophical. They were also political. Levinas's investments were born out in his writings on Judaism and ultimately in an evolving conviction that the young state of Israel held the best possibility for achieving such an ideal. For Derrida, the Jewish question was literary. The stakes of Jewish survival could only be approached through reflections on modern literature's religious legacy, a line of thinking that provided him the means to reconceive democracy. Hammerschlag's reexamination of Derrida and Levinas's textual exchange not only produces a new account of this friendship but also has significant ramifications for debates within Continental philosophy, the study of religion, and political theology.
Author : Asja Szafraniec
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 268 pages
File Size : 33,4 MB
Release : 2007
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780804754576
The late Jacques Derrida’s notion of literature is explored in this new study. Starting with Derrida’s self-professed inability to comment on the work of Samuel Beckett, whom Derrida nevertheless considered one of the most interesting and exemplary writers of our time, Asja Szafraniec argues that the shared feature of literary works as Derrida understands them is a double, juridical-economical gesture, and that one aspect of this notion (the juridical) is more hospitable to Beckett’s oeuvre than the other. She then discusses other contemporary philosophical approaches to Beckett, including those of Gilles Deleuze, Stanley Cavell, and Alain Badiou. The book offers an innovative analysis of Derrida’s approach to literature, as well as an overview of current philosophical approaches to contemporary literature, and a number of innovative readings of Beckett’s work.
Author : Maurice Blanchot
Publisher : U of Minnesota Press
Page : 514 pages
File Size : 41,26 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780816619702
In this landmark volume, Blanchot sustains a dialogue with a number of thinkers whose contributions have marked turning points in the history of Western thought and have influenced virtually all the themes that inflect the contemporary literary and philosophical debate today. "Blanchot waits for us still to come, to be read and reread. . . I would say that never as much as today have I pictured him so far ahead of us." Jacques Derrida
Author : Lycette Nelson
Publisher : SUNY Press
Page : 172 pages
File Size : 42,28 MB
Release : 1992-07-01
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 9780791409084
This book is a translation of Maurice Blanchot's work that is of major importance to late 20th-century literature and philosophy studies. Using the fragmentary form, Blanchot challenges the boundaries between the literary and the philosophical. With the obsessive rigor that has always marked his writing, Blanchot returns to the themes that have haunted his work since the beginning: writing, death, transgression, the neuter, but here the figures around whom his discussion turns are Hegel and Nietzsche rather than Mallarme and Kafka. The metaphor Blanchot uses for writing in The Step Not Beyond is the game of chance. Fragmentary writing is a play of limits, a play of ever-multiplied terms in which no one term ever takes precedence. Through the randomness of the fragmentary, Blanchot explores ideas as varied as the relation of writing to luck and to the law, the displacement of the self in writing, the temporality of the Eternal Return, the responsibility of the self towards the others.