Apotheosis of actuality: Kierkegaard’s poetic life

Continental Philosophy Review 43 (4):509-523 (2010)
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Abstract

By way of an interaction with Kierkegaard’s Point of View, this paper attempts to show the extent to which Kierkegaard’s Repetition was a poetic repetition of his own life. By comparing several of his published texts with journal entries and letters to friends, this paper traces the extent and degree of Kierkegaard’s poetic reflection and corresponding lack of existential immediacy. At its most extreme, this paper argues that Kierkegaard did not really exist in the typical sense of the term; or, more precisely, that he only existed as a poetic repetition, an apotheosized ideal. Kierkegaard lived only insofar as he wrote himself into poetry

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Shane M. Ewegen
Trinity College

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Concluding unscientific postscript to Philosophical fragments.Søren Kierkegaard - 1992 - Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. Edited by Howard Vincent Hong, Edna Hatlestad Hong & Søren Kierkegaard.
Philosophical fragments.Søren Kierkegaard - 1962 - Princeton, N.J.,: Princeton University Press. Edited by David F. Swenson.
Fear and Trembling/Repetition.Søren Kierkegaard, Howard V. Hong & Edna H. Hong - 1984 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 15 (3):191-192.
Kierkegaard as Religious Thinker.David Jay Gouwens - 1996 - New York: Cambridge University Press.

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