How to Read SartreW.W. Norton & Company, 2007 - 116 ページ The How to Read series provides a context and an explanation that will facilitate and enrich your understanding of texts vital to the canon. These books use excerpts from the major texts to explain essential topics, such as Jean-Paul Sartre's pioneering thoughts on individual freedom, which served as a foundation for his role as the political champion of the oppressed. Jean-Paul Sartre is best known as the pre-eminent philosopher of individual freedom. He is the one who told us that we are totally free. Robert Bernasconi shows how the early existentialist Sartre became in stages the political champion of the oppressed. Extracts are drawn from the full range of Sartre's writings including the novel Nausea, and the major philosophical text Being and Nothingness. They show why of all major twentieth-century philosophers Sartre was the one who most easily passed beyond the confines of the academy to a general readership. |
目次
Outside in the World Among Others | 16 |
Hell Is Other People | 28 |
He Is Playing at Being a Waiter in a Café | 35 |
著作権 | |
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多く使われている語句
abstract action already analytic reason anti Anti-Semite and Jew attempt bad faith basis Black Orpheus bourgeois choice choose claim Communist Party Communists and Peace concrete consciousness coward Critique of Dialectical Dialectical Reason essay on intentionality Estelle ethical example exis Existentialism extract fact facticity Fanon's for-itself Frantz Fanon freedom French French Communist Party future Garcin gaze Heidegger Heidegger's hell highlights Husserl idea of intentionality in-itself individual Inez Jean-Paul Sartre Jewish least favoured Les Temps Modernes look Manichaeism Marxism means Merleau-Ponty Nausea negation negritude never Nevertheless Nothingness novel one's oneself ontological oppressed ourselves phenomenology play position possibility praxis problem proletariat published Read readers realism and idealism reality recognize relation responsibility Roquentin Sartre calls Sartre's account Sartre's philosophy scarcity Semite sense Simone de Beauvoir simply situation skilled worker society Soviet superfluous takes Temps Modernes tence things tion trans transcendence words write