"Poetry does not impose, it exposes itself", wrote Paul Celan. Werner Hamacher's investigations into crucial texts of philosophical and literary modernity show that Celan's apothegm is also valid for the structure of understanding and for language in general. "Subject position" is widely invoked today, and Hamacher thoroughly investigates the premises for this invocation. He demonstrates that the promise of a subject position is not only unavoidable - and thus produces more and more fundemantalisms - but is also unattainable and therefore always open to innovation, revision and unexpected transformation. In a book that is both philosophical and literary, Hamacher gives us the fullest account of the vast disruption in the very nature of our understanding that was first unleashed by Kant's critique of human subjectivity. In light of the double nature of every premise - that it is promised but never attainable - Hamacher gives us nine decisive themes, topics, and texts of modernity: the hermeneutic circle in Schleiermacher and Heidegger, the structure of ethical commands in Kant, Nietzsche's genealogy of moral terms and his exploration of the aporias of singularity, the irony of reading in de Man, the parabasis of language in Schlegel, Kleist's disruption of narrative representation, the gesture of naming in Benjamin and Kafka, and the incisive caesura that Paul Celan inserts into temporal and linguistic reversals.
0 有用 Aretanius 2024-03-02 08:51:25 英国
有很多表述相当喜欢。但车轱辘话来回说太啰嗦了
0 有用 Aretanius 2024-03-02 08:51:25 英国
有很多表述相当喜欢。但车轱辘话来回说太啰嗦了