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Literature and the Question of Philosophy

edited by Anthony J. Cascardi

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A distinguished group of authors reflects on problems currently enlivening the space shared by philosophy and literary theory. Literature and the Question of Philosophy treats the relations between the two fields in a series of chapters that range in scope from Plato to postmodernism.

Contributors Alexander Nehamas and Denis Dutton critique such fundamental notions as "author" and "text," while Mary Bittner Wiseman outlines a postsubjective theory of the self, drawing on the work of Roland Barthes. Stanley Rosen presents a powerful criticism of hermeneutics directed at its philological...

A distinguished group of authors reflects on problems currently enlivening the space shared by philosophy and literary theory. Literature and the Question of Philosophy treats the relations between the two fields in a series of chapters that range in scope from Plato to postmodernism.

Contributors Alexander Nehamas and Denis Dutton critique such fundamental notions as "author" and "text," while Mary Bittner Wiseman outlines a postsubjective theory of the self, drawing on the work of Roland Barthes. Stanley Rosen presents a powerful criticism of hermeneutics directed at its philological proponents and its Derridean opponents alike. Charles Altieri and Martha Craven Nussbaum map the relations of ethics and aesthetics, and Arthur C. Danto offers an overview of the relationships between philosophy and literature in an already celebrated essay. Anthony J. Cascardi provides a series of introductions which guide the reader through these and other contributions.

Reviews

Reviews

At the forefront of the most exciting, important, original, and serious recent work both in post-foundational moral philosophy and in literary theory. This work is nicely juxtaposed... with the more skeptical essays of the postmodernist textualist.

In these impressive essays, philosophy rediscovers that it is written; literature recaptures its moral seriousness.

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Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
352
ISBN
9780801838408
Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Anthony J. Cascardi
Chapter 1. Philosophy as/ and/ of Literature
Chapter 2. Philosophy and Poetry: The Difference between Them in Plato and Descartes
Chapter 3. Philosophical

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Anthony J. Cascardi
Chapter 1. Philosophy as/ and/ of Literature
Chapter 2. Philosophy and Poetry: The Difference between Them in Plato and Descartes
Chapter 3. Philosophical Discourses and Fictional Texts
Chapter 4. Levels of Discourse in Plato's Dialogues
Chapter 5. From the Sublime to the Natural: Romantic Responses to Kant
Chapter 6. From Expressivist Aesthetics to Expressivist Ethics
Chapter 7. "Finely Aware and Richly Responsible": Literature and the Moral Imagination
Chapter 8. Why Intentionalism Won't Go Away
Chapter 9. The Limits of Interpretation
Chapter 10. Endowment, Enablement, Entitlement: Toward a Theory of Constitution
Chapter 11. Writer, Text, Work, Author
Chapter 12. Rewriting the Self: Barthes and the Utopias of Language
Chapter 13. Postmodernism in Philosophy: Nostalgia for the Future, Waiting for the Past
Notes on Contributors

Author Bio
Featured Contributor

Anthony J. Cascardi

Anthony J. Cascardi is the author of The Limits of Illusion and of The Bounds of Reason: Cervantes, Dostoevsky, Flaubert. He is associate professor of comparative literature at the University of California, Berkeley.