The mystic fable
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The mystic fable
(Religion and postmodernism)
University of Chicago Press, c1992-
- v. 1 : alk. paper
- v. 1 : pbk.
- v. 2 : cloth
- Other Title
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La fable mystique
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Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityグローバル専攻
v. 1 : pbk.COE-SA||164||Cer||9808437798084377
Note
Translation of: La fable mystique
Vol. 2. text established and presented by Luce Giard
Vol. 2. The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents of Works
- v. 1. The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
v. 1 : alk. paper ISBN 9780226100364
Description
The culmination of de Certeau's lifelong engagement with the human sciences, this volume is both an analysis of Christian mysticism during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and an application of this influential scholar's transdisciplinary historiography.
- Volume
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v. 2 : cloth ISBN 9780226209135
Description
More than two decades have passed since Chicago published the first volume of this groundbreaking work in the Religion and Postmodernism series. It quickly became influential across a wide range of disciplines and helped to make the tools of poststructuralist thought available to religious studies and theology, especially in the areas of late medieval and early modern mysticism. Though the second volume remained in fragments at the time of his death, Michel de Certeau had the foresight to leave his literary executor detailed instructions for its completion, which formed the basis for the present work. Together, both volumes solidify Certeau's place as a touchstone of twentieth-century literature and philosophy, and continue his exploration of the paradoxes of historiography; the construction of social reality through practice, testimony, and belief; the theorization of speech in angelology and glossolalia; and the interplay of prose and poetry in discourses of the ineffable. This book will be of vital interest to scholars in religious studies, theology, philosophy, history, and literature.
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