The Persistence of Romanticism: Essays in Philosophy and LiteratureCambridge University Press, 2001/02/05 - 251 ページ These challenging essays defend Romanticism against its critics. They argue that Romantic thought, interpreted as the pursuit of freedom in concrete contexts, remains a central and exemplary form of both artistic work and philosophical understanding. Richard Eldridge traces the central features of Romantic thinking and shows that Romanticism is neither emptily literary and escapist nor dogmatically optimistic and sentimental. The first serious philosophical defense of the ethical ideals of Romanticism, this volume will appeal particularly to all professionals and students in philosophy, literature and aesthetics. |
目次
Introduction The Persistence of Romanticism | 1 |
KANT AND POSTKANTIAN ROMANTICISM | 29 |
Kant Holderlin and the Experience of Longing | 31 |
Modernity and Expression Kant on the Value of Absolute Music | 52 |
How Is the Kantian Moral Criticism of Literature Possible? | 71 |
Holderlins Ethical Thinking The Process of the Actual in Heidelberg | 85 |
Internal Transcendentalism Wordsworth and A New Condition of Philosophy | 102 |
TWENTIETHCENTURY PHILOSOPHICAL ROMANTICISMS WITTGENSTEIN CAVELL AND THE ARTS | 125 |
Hypotheses Criterial Claims and Perspicuous Representations Wittgensteins Remarks on Frazers The Golden Bough | 127 |
How Can Tragedy Matter for Us? | 145 |
Althusser and Ideological Criticism of the Arts | 165 |
A Continuing Task Cavell and the Truth of Skepticism | 189 |
Plights of Embodied Soul Dramas of Sin and Salvation in Augustine and Updike | 205 |
Cavell and Holderlin on Human Immigrancy | 229 |
247 | |
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absolute music achieve action aesthetic Althusser Althusser's antiskeptic articulate artistic aspiration Augustine awareness beauty Cambridge Cavell's claims conception condition consciousness criticism Critique Critique of Judgment desire embodied envisionings essay eudaimonia existence experience expression fact fantasies feeling Frazer G. E. M. Anscombe G. W. F. Hegel hamartia Harry Hegel hence Hölderlin human freedom Ibid idea ideal Ideological State Apparatuses ideology imagination interpretation John Updike judgment Kant Kant's Lacan language literary lives M. H. Abrams Marxism material means metaphysical mind modern moral law narrative nature objects one's oneself ourselves persons perspicuous representation philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry political possibilities powers practices present rational reality reason relations of production repression Romantic Romanticism sense simply skepticism social Stanley Cavell structures sublime things thinking thought tion tragedy trans transcendental ture understanding University Press Updike Wittgenstein Wordsworth writing