Prix bas
CHF120.00
Pas encore paru. Cet article sera disponible le 01.05.2025
Informationen zum Autor Paola Marrati is Professor of Humanities and Philosophy at Johns Hopkins University, USA. She is member of the Scientific Board of the Center for the Study of French Contemporary Philsoophy at the Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris, France, and other international research networks. Her publications include Genesis and Trace: Derrida Reader of Husserl and Heidegger (2005) and Gilles Deleuze: Cinema and Philosophy (2008). Klappentext Stanley Cavell, undoubtedly one of the most singular and influential voices in contemporary philosophy, has written extensively on modernist art - particularly on painting, photography, music, and literature. He has also dedicated an impressive body of work to cinema, whose complex and nuanced status in regard to modernism constitutes one of Cavell's main concerns. However, Cavell's importance for understanding modernism is not exhausted by his interest in, and analyses of, modernist art and literature. Equally significant, and perhaps even more original, is his understanding of ordinary language philosophy as a modernist enterprise in its own terms. Following the template for the Understanding Philosophy, Understanding Modernism series, this volume is divided into three distinct parts. The first part, "Conceptualizing Cavell," features introductory essays on Cavell's most important works. The second part, "Cavell and Aesthetics," delves into more specific aspects and problems pertaining to Cavell's aesthetics and its moral and political implications. The third part is an extended glossary of Cavell's key words and concepts. Vorwort Explores and illuminates Stanley Cavell's profound impact on our understanding of literary modernism. Zusammenfassung Stanley Cavell, undoubtedly one of the most singular and influential voices in contemporary philosophy, has written extensively on modernist art particularly on painting, photography, music, and literature. He has also dedicated an impressive body of work to cinema, whose complex and nuanced status in regard to modernism constitutes one of Cavell's main concerns. However, Cavell's importance for understanding modernism is not exhausted by his interest in, and analyses of, modernist art and literature. Equally significant, and perhaps even more original, is his understanding of ordinary language philosophy as a modernist enterprise in its own terms. Following the template for the Understanding Philosophy, Understanding Modernism series, this volume is divided into three distinct parts. The first part, "Conceptualizing Cavell," features introductory essays on Cavell's most important works. The second part, "Cavell and Aesthetics," delves into more specific aspects and problems pertaining to Cavell's aesthetics and its moral and political implications. The third part is an extended glossary of Cavell's key words and concepts. Inhaltsverzeichnis Abbreviations Contributors Introduction: Stanley Cavell and the Quest of a Voice of One's Own for Philosophy ( Paola Marrati, Johns Hopkins University, USA ) Part 1 Conceptualizing Cavell 1. Must We Mean What We Say? and the (Re)Birth of Ordinary Language Philosophy ( Sandra Laugier, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France ) 2. Modernism in The World Viewed ( Hugo Clémot, Université de Tours, France and Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France ) 3. Senses of Walden: Thoreau's Exemplary Act ( Paul Standish, University College London, UK ) 4. The Claim of Reason: Wittgenstein, Skepticism, Morality, and Tragedy ( Paola Marrati , Johns Hopkins University, USA )5. Democracy as a Way of Life and An-archic Perfectionism: Rereading Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome ( Naoko Saito, University of Kyoto, Japan ) Part 2 Cavell and Aesthetics 6. In Quest of the Ordinary: Philosophy, Literature and the Romantic Response ( A...
Préface
Explores and illuminates Stanley Cavell's profound impact on our understanding of literary modernism.
Texte du rabat
Stanley Cavell, undoubtedly one of the most singular and influential voices in contemporary philosophy, has written extensively on modernist art - particularly on painting, photography, music, and literature. He has also dedicated an impressive body of work to cinema, whose complex and nuanced status in regard to modernism constitutes one of Cavell's main concerns. However, Cavell's importance for understanding modernism is not exhausted by his interest in, and analyses of, modernist art and literature. Equally significant, and perhaps even more original, is his understanding of ordinary language philosophy as a modernist enterprise in its own terms. Following the template for the Understanding Philosophy, Understanding Modernism series, this volume is divided into three distinct parts. The first part, "Conceptualizing Cavell," features introductory essays on Cavell's most important works. The second part, "Cavell and Aesthetics," delves into more specific aspects and problems pertaining to Cavell's aesthetics and its moral and political implications. The third part is an extended glossary of Cavell's key words and concepts.
Contenu
Abbreviations Contributors Introduction: Stanley Cavell and the Quest of a Voice of One's Own for Philosophy (Paola Marrati, Johns Hopkins University, USA) Part 1 Conceptualizing Cavell 1. Must We Mean What We Say? and the (Re)Birth of Ordinary Language Philosophy (Sandra Laugier, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France) 2. Modernism in The World Viewed (Hugo Clémot, Université de Tours, France and Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France) 3. Senses of Walden: Thoreau's Exemplary Act (Paul Standish, University College London, UK) 4. The Claim of Reason: Wittgenstein, Skepticism, Morality, and Tragedy (Paola Marrati, Johns Hopkins University, USA) 5. Democracy as a Way of Life and An-archic Perfectionism: Rereading Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome (Naoko Saito, University of Kyoto, Japan) Part 2 Cavell and Aesthetics 6. In Quest of the Ordinary: Philosophy, Literature and the Romantic Response (Andrew Brandel, Harvard University, USA) 7. Measuring the Value of Human Life According to a Perfectionist Philosopher: A reading of Cities of Words: Pedagogical Letters on a Register of the Moral Life (David LaRocca, Harvard University, USA) 8. Modernism: Notes toward a Philosophical Approach (Piergiorgio Donatelli, Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy) 9. Modernism and Film at Criticism: Rethinking the Aesthetic Possibilities of the Medium (Elise Domenach, Ecole Normale Supérieure, France) 10. Cavell and the Modernity of Film (Eli Friedlander, Tel Aviv University, Israel) Part 3 Glossary 11. Claim (Sandra Laugier, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France) 12. Criteria (Martin Shuster, University of North Carolina, USA) 13. On the Human Form of Life (Veena Das, Johns Hopkins University, USA) 14. Skepticism (Jeroen Gerrits, SUNY Binghamton, USA) 15. Tragedy (Nicole Jerr, United States Air Force Academy, USA) Index