The Time is Out of Joint: Shakespeare as Philosopher of History

Voorkant
Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 - 375 pagina's
The Time Is Out of Joint handles the Shakespearean oeuvre from a philosophical perspective, finding that Shakespeare's historical dramas reflect on issues and reveal puzzles which were taken up by philosophy proper only in the centuries following them. Shakespeare's extraordinary handling of time and temporality, the difference between truth and fact, that of theory, and that of interpretation and revelatory truth are evaluated in terms of Shakespeare's own conjectural endeavors, and are compared with early modern, modern, and postmodern thought. Heller shows that modernity, which recognized itself in Shakespeare only from the time of Romanticism, found in Shakespeare's work a revelatory character which marked the end of both metaphysical system-building and a tragic reckoning with the inaccessibility of an absolute, timeless truth. Heller distinguishes the four stages found in constantly unique relation in Shakespeare's work (historical, personal, political, and existential) and probes their significance as time comes to fall 'out of joint' and may be again set aright. Rather than initially bestowing upon Shakespeare the dubious honorary title of philosopher, Heller probes the concretely situated reflections of characters who must face a blind and irrational fate either without taking responsibility for the discordance of time, or with a responsibility which may both transform history into politics, and set right the time which is out of joint. In the ruminations and undertakings of these characters, Shakespeare's dramas present a philosophy of history, a political philosophy, and a philosophy of (im)moral personality. Heller weighs each as distinctly modern confrontations with the possibility of truth and virtue within a human historical condition no less multifarious for its momentariness.

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Inhoudsopgave

What Is Nature? What Is Natural?
13
Who Am I? Dressing Up Stripping Naked
31
Acting Playing Pretending Disguising
55
The Absolute Strangers
73
Judgment of Human Character To Betray and to Be Betrayed
87
Love Sex Subversion Political Drama Family Drama
97
The Sphinx Called Time
115
Virtues and Vices Guilt Good and Evil
141
Richard II
161
1 2 and 3 Henry VI
189
The Tragedy of King Richard III
251
THREE ROMAN PLAYS
277
Antony and Cleopatra
335
Historical Truth and Poetic Truth
333
About the Author
341
Copyright

THE HISTORY PLAYS
159

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Over de auteur (2002)

Agnes Heller is Hannah Arendt Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York.

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