The thought and art of Joseph Joubert, 1754-1824
著者
書誌事項
The thought and art of Joseph Joubert, 1754-1824
(Oxford modern languages and literature monographs)
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1992
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book rescues Joubert from the ranks of minor French moralistes, and, by tracing the development of his thought from his time as secretary to Diderot through to the period of his association with Chateaubriand, demonstrates that he was a writer on aesthetics of considerable sensitivity.
Examination of his manuscripts and of his annotation to books in his library shows that Joubert's primary concern, during the period that witnessed the gradual but profound change from the intellectual values of the Enlightenment to those of the Romantic period, was to establish the status and nature of art and poetry. Reading widely among philosophers and poets from Plato and Homer to Kant and Andre Chenier, Joubert consigned his thoughts and perceptions to a series of carnets which
form the basis of this study and bear witness to an unusually eclectic and enquiring mind.
Joubert's significance is not confined to the Enlightenment and Romantic periods. He is unique among writers of his day in the way that his own interrogation of the very act of writing anticipates the aesthetic of later, highly influential writers such as Mallarme.
目次
- The early years
- politics and aesthetics
- Platonism and expressive aesthetics
- the status of art in the "Carnets"
- idea, image and copy
- imagination and the form of the "Carnets"
- final profile. Appendix: Joubert's reading of Plato.
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