Philosophical ShakespearesJohn J. Joughin Taylor & Francis US, 2000 - 128 pagina's Shakespeare continues to articulate the central problems of our intellectual inheritance. The plays of a Renaissance playwright still seem to be fundamental to our understanding and experience of modernity. Key philosophical questions concerning value, meaning and justice continue to resonate in Shakespeare's work. In the course of rethinking these issues, Philosophical Shakespeares actively encourages the growing dissolution of boundaries between literature and philosophy. The approach throughout is interdisciplinary, and ranges from problem-centred readings of particular plays to more general elaborations of the significance of Shakespeare in relation to individual thinkers or philosophical traditions. |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Adorno aesthetic affirmation Althusser Analysis argues argument baby Bardolatry believe Belsey Belsey's Bradley Cavell Caygill character colonial complex Constitution contemporary context cookies course critical critique culture Deleuze Dialectic of Enlightenment effect English Enlightenment equivocal Eternal Return evil existence experience fact father fiction figure Foucault Frankfurt German Grady Grahamstown Habermas Hamlet Henriad Henry Henry VI ideology instrumental rationality intensity Jack Cade jouissance Julius Caesar King Lear Klossowski 1997 Knights knowledge L. C. Knights Lacan Lady Macbeth Lady Macbeth's child language Latour lecture liberal humanism literary literature logical make-believe meaning Merriman modern subjectivity monarch moral mother narrative negation never Nietzsche Nietzsche's not-nothing ontological Play-Doh playwright's political postmodern primordial impulse Private Idaho question reading reified resistance Richard Schlegel sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays significant social story symbolic theory thing thought tion told as known tradition truth understanding vanishing mediator witches writing Xhosa Žižek