The anatomy of philosophical style : literary philosophy and the philosophy of literature
著者
書誌事項
The anatomy of philosophical style : literary philosophy and the philosophy of literature
B. Blackwell, 1990
- : pbk
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注記
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
"Literary Philosophy and the Philosophy of Literature" considers the relation between literature and philosophy elucidating the way literary theory and criticism can be applied to the texts of philosophy, and the way philosophical analysis can elucidate many of the central features of "literariness". In the literary study of philosophical writing, such issues are addressed as the identity and function of philosophical genres, the roles of implied author and reader in philosophical texts and the use of figuration and tropes in philosophical discourse. The claim of the importance of the literary analysis of philosophical writing for the reading of philosophy is argued for on the basis of examples from philosophers as diverse as Plato, Leibniz, Kant, Nietzsche, G.E. Moore and in sustained discussion of the work of Descartes.
目次
- Part 1 Philosophical discourse and literary form: the anatomy of philosophical style
- the plots and acts of philosophical genre
- Descartes between method and style
- philosophy in its history - two views
- philosophical humours
- nostalgia for the future, waiting for the past - post-modernism in philosophy. Part 2 Literary form and non-literary fact: Hamlet's grandmother(s)
- autobiography as a matter of literary fact
- the animal-in-the-text - fables and literary origins
- the politics of interpretation - Spinoza's modernist turn
- the praxis of criticism.
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