Structure and gestalt : philosophy and literature in Austria-Hungary and her successor states
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Bibliographic Information
Structure and gestalt : philosophy and literature in Austria-Hungary and her successor states
(Linguistic & literary studies in Eastern Europe, v. 7)
Benjamins, 1981
Available at 14 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographies
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The majority of the papers in the present volume were presented at, or prepared in conjunction with, meetings of the Seminar for Austro-German Philosophy, a group of philosophers interested in the work of Brentano and Husserl and of the various thinkers who fell under their influence. One long-standing concern of the Seminar has been to trace the origins of present-day structuralism and related movements in the thought of nineteenth-century central Europe.
Table of Contents
- 1. Preface
- 2. On the Poetry and the Plurifunctionality of Language (by Holenstein, Elmar)
- 3. Alois Riegl: The Synchronic Analysis of Stylistic Types (by Iversen, Margaret)
- 4. Bolzano and the Dark Doctrine: An Essay on Aesthetics (by McCormick, Peter)
- 5. Kafka and Brentano: A Study in Descriptive Psychology (by Smith, Barry)
- 6. Brentano and Freud (by Heaton, John M.)
- 7. The Optimum Velocity of Approach: Some Reflections on Kafka's Trial (by Kavanagh, R.J.)
- 8. The Production of Ideas: Notes on Austrian Intellectual History from Bolzano to Wittgenstein (by Smith, Barry)
- 9. Philosophy and National Consciousness in Austria and Hungary: A Comparative Socio-Psychological Sketch (by Nyiri, J.C.)
- 10. Therapeutic Nihilism: How Not to Write about Otto Weininger (by Janik, Allan)
- 11. Philosophy, Animality and Justice: Kleist, Kafka, Weininger and Wittgenstein (by Mulligan, Kevin)
- 12. Prefatory Note
- 13. Identity and Division as a Fundamental Theme of Politics (by Kolnai, Aurel)
- 14. List of Contributors
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