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Two studies of Friedrich Hölderlin

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Two Studies of Friedrich Hölderlin shows how the poet enacts a radical theory of meaning that culminates in a unique and still groundbreaking concept of revolution, one that begins with a revolutionary understanding of language. The product of an intense engagement with both Walter Benjamin and Jacques Derrida, the book presents Werner Hamacher's major attempts at developing a critical practice commensurate with the immensity of Hölderlin's late writings. These essays offer an incisive and innovative combination of critical theory and deconstruction while also identifying where influential critics like Heidegger fail to do justice to the poet's astonishing radicality. Readers will not only come away with a new appreciation of Hölderlin's poetic and political-theoretical achievements but will also discover the motivating force behind Hamacher's own achievements as a literary scholar and political theorist. An introduction by Julia Ng and an afterword by Peter Fenves provide further information about these studies and the academic and theoretical context in which they were composed.

Title Two studies of Friedrich Hölderlin / Werner Hamacher
edited by Peter Fenves and Julia Ng
translated by Julia Ng and Anthony Curtis Adler.
Publisher Stanford, California : Stanford University Press
Creation Date [2020]
Notes 'Version of meaning' was submitted to the Freie Universität-Berlin in German in 1971 as a Magisterarbeit under the title Bild und Zeichen in der späten Lyrik Hölderlins. 'Parousia, stonewalls' was originally published in German in 2006 under the title Parousia, Mauern : Mittelbarkeit und Zeitlichkeit, später Hölderlin.
Issued also in print.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
In English and German.
Content Frontmatter -- Contents -- Translators’ Preface -- Acknowledgments -- List of Abbreviations and Note on Citations -- Introduction. Versing, Ending: Hölderlin in 1971 -- I. Version of Meaning A Study of Hölderlin’s Late Lyric Poetry -- II. Parousia, Stone-Walls Mediacy and Temporality, Late Hölderlin -- Afterword. Toward a “Non-Metaphysical ‘Concept’ of Revolution” -- Appendix: Hölderlin, “The Only One,” Third Version -- Notes -- Name Index
Series Meridian : crossing aesthetics
Extent 1 online resource (241 pages).
Language English
Copyright Date ©2020
National Library system number 997012635041505171
MARC RECORDS

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