Results for 'literary representations'

953 found
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  1.  36
    Literary Representations of a Worker's Mind: Superfluity and “Mental Emptiness” from Jack London's The apostate to Kafka's works.Luigi Ferrari - 2017 - World Futures 73 (4-5):248-270.
    Literature has been dealing with modern work and its psychological and social consequences through two kinds of narrations: verismo/realism and symbolism. Jack London wrote incredibly penetrating pages from a psychological viewpoint with a veristic prose; Kafka widened the reflection with his symbolism and, particularly, through dreamlike parables. Kafka was not a passive and absent-minded employee. Recent studies on his working documents have shown considerable passion and professional competence. This expertise was poured into his literary works about work and organizations (...)
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  2.  6
    Literary Representations of Cottaging in London.Johan Andersson & Ben Campkin - 2009 - In Olga Gershenson Barbara Penner (ed.), Ladies and Gents: Public Toilets and Gender. Temple University Press. pp. 208.
  3.  59
    Transnational Xenophobia in Europe? Literary Representations of Contemporary Fears.Raymond Taras - 2009 - The European Legacy 14 (4):391-407.
    Does an enlarged Europe harbor an enlarged fear of foreigners? Has EU expansion produced a bizarre, unintentional convergence in the xenophobic attitudes of eastern and western Europeans? What is the texture of this xenophobia in the different parts of Europe? This article is divided into three parts. First, it summarizes the contemporary European debate on fear of foreigners, antipathy towards immigrants, and the effort to enforce boundaries of national belonging. Second, it provides empirical evidence about national phobias using Germany and (...)
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  4.  19
    Scientific Amusements: Literary Representations of the Birmingham Lunar Society.Pam Perkins - 2006 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 25:57.
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  5. The aesthetics of a limit-changes in the literary representation of the horizon.D. Innerarity - 1994 - Pensamiento 50 (198):353-382.
     
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  6.  12
    ‘Wipe the Dust off your Feet’: Glimpses of the Rejected Missionary in Literary Representations of Late Eighteenth-Century North America.Michael J. Gilmour - 2008 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 25 (4):205-216.
    This article looks at the missionary – widely defined – as a character in late eighteenth-century literature. Specifically, it asks why authors would choose to include stories about failures in missionary endeavours. The paper argues that the answer lies in the pervasive influence of biblical stories on colonial religious discourse. The authors treated here view the failed missionary as a harbinger of the gospel's ultimate success because Jesus himself said as much to his apostles, warning of opposition and rejection prior (...)
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  7.  18
    "Are You Trembling, Earth?": Nonhuman Nature in Literary Representations of the Holocaust.Joanna Krongold - 2023 - Environment, Space, Place 15 (2):63-88.
    Applying an ecocritical lens to Holocaust literature, this paper explores the connection between the natural world and the seemingly unnatural machinations of the Holocaust by placing two writers in conversation: Abraham Sutzkever and Vasily Grossman. For Sutzkever, the famed Yiddish poet of Vilna, poetry was linked to survival and to the environment, sometimes emerging from a bog, wilderness, or mutilated landscape but shining all the more brightly for its mired origins. Grossman, another important documenter of the Holocaust, was a Soviet-Jewish (...)
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  8. From an Enclosed Universe to the Cartesian Vortex – Pascal’s, La Fontaine’s, and Fontenelle’s Literary Representation of the Universe.Jiani Fan - 2023 - Papers on French Seventeenth Century Literature (99):299-325.
  9.  15
    Surviving Melancholy and Mourning: a Queer Politics of Damage in Italian Literary. Representations of Same-sex Parenting.Charlotte Ross - 2020 - Phenomenology and Mind 19 (19):54.
    While family forms are ever more diverse, there are few critical analyses of the ways in which LGBTQ families have been represented in fiction. This article explores recent Italian novels by Cristiana Alicata, Melania Mazzucco and Chiara Francini that depict lesbian and gay parents and their children. In all these novels at least one gay or lesbian parent dies. Drawing on Judith Butler’s work on mourning and melancholia, I problematize the persistent spectre of grief and loss attached to gay and (...)
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  10.  9
    Ad majorem evidentiam: literární reprezentace "zřejmého" v textech J.A. Komenského = Ad majorem evidentiam: literary representations of obviousness in the works of J.A. Comenius.Lenka Řezníková - 2018 - Praha: Filosofia.
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  11.  18
    Abstract of Comments: Against the Undecidability of Literary Representation: Reply to Louis Mackey.David Couzens Hoy - 1983 - Noûs 17 (1):35 - 36.
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  12.  13
    Representation of the German in the Discursive Field of the Russian Classical Literary Canon.Yulia Alekseevna Kuzmina - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The article presents literary, sociological and cultural points of view on the problem of the literary canon, describes the mechanisms of canonization and defines the boundaries of the Russian classics. The author discovers a connection between the texts claiming the status of the canonical hierarchy and the question of ethnicity. The article establishes that the construction of both a national self-portrait and the image of a foreigner (the Other) are the most important functions of the classical canon. The (...)
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  13.  27
    Representation, Conversion, and Literary Form: "Harrington" and the Novel of Jewish Identity.Michael Ragussis - 1989 - Critical Inquiry 16 (1):113-143.
    It was [Maria] Edgeworth’s deeply personal motive in writing Harrington that made possible the special self-reflexive quality that informs her novel. In the act of reviewing her role as a reader and a writer of anti-Semitic portraits, she was able to recognize a tradition of discourse she had at once inherited and perpetuated. And only by recognizing such a tradition was she able both to subvert it in Harrington and to articulate for future writers the way to move beyond it. (...)
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  14.  6
    The Representation of Psychological War-Related Traumas in the Literary Works of Contemporary Burundian and Ukrainian Writers: African and European Perspectives.Audace Mbonyingingo, Olena Moiseyenko & Dmytro Mazin - 2023 - Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal 10:89-119.
    The article explores the representation of psychological traumas afflicted by war in contemporary literary writing by Burundian (African) and Ukrainian (European) authors who were witnesses of the events described in their works. Based on the existing linguistic and psychological theoretical approaches to the phenomenon of a mental wound, a comparative perspective is provided on the nature, literary, and linguistic manifestations of psychological trauma in Burundian novels by Antoine Kaburahe and Marie-Therese Toyi, presenting the tragic, but stoic experience during (...)
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  15.  35
    K. Demoen : The Greek City from Antiquity to the Present: Historical Reality, Ideological Construction, Literary Representation. Pp. xi + 245, ills. Louvain, Paris, and Sterling, VA: Peeters, 2001. Paper, E42.40. ISBN: 90-429-0971-4. [REVIEW]Michael Angold - 2002 - The Classical Review 52 (2):402-403.
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  16.  27
    Literary Genres and Textual Representations of Early Vīraśaiva History: Revisiting Ekānta Rāmayya’s Self-Beheading. [REVIEW]Gil Ben-Herut - 2012 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 16 (2):129-187.
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  17.  13
    Q-analysis and literary structure: A multi-dimensional representation of poetic relations.David R. Mcconnaughey - 1987 - Semiotica 64 (3-4):229-248.
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  18. pt. 2. Literary, visual and cultural representation.Sadie Wearing - 2014 - In Mary Evans, Clare Hemmings, Marsha Henry, Hazel Johnstone, Sumi Madhok, Ania Plomien & Sadie Wearing (eds.), The SAGE handbook of feminist theory. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE reference.
     
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  19.  13
    Picturing Fiction Through Embodied Cognition: Drawn Representations and Viewpoint in Literary Texts.Bien Klomberg & Theresa Schilhab - 2022 - Routledge.
    This concise volume addresses the question of whether or not language, and its structure in literary discourses, determines individuals' mental 'vision, ' employing an innovative cross-disciplinary approach using readers' drawings of their mental imagery during reading. The book engages in critical dialogue with the perceived wisdom in stylistics rooted in Roger Fowler's seminal work on deixis and point of view to test whether or not this theory can fully account for what readers see in their mind's eye and how (...)
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  20.  37
    Representation and Immersion. The Embodied Meaning of Literature.Pierre-Louis Patoine - 2019 - Gestalt Theory 41 (2):201-215.
    Summary This article explores the relations among three forms of representations (artistic, mental, and neural) and immersion, considered as an altered state of consciousness, in the context of literary reading. We first define immersive reading as an intensification of our embodied experience of literary representation, in accordance to neuropsychological studies about embodied cognition. We further consider the style of interpretation demanded by such immersive reading and its ethical and ecological underpinnings.
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  21.  25
    Postcolonial Literary History and the Concealed Totality of Life.Eli Park Sorensen - 2014 - Paragraph 37 (2):235-253.
    This article attempts to explore some current theoretical problems within the field of postcolonial studies. In particular, I address Ato Quayson's recent complaint that postcolonial theorists generally have failed to ‘provide a persuasive account of literature and history simultaneously’, a problem which I link to what I see as the field's theoretical obsession with the concept of ‘representation’; I argue that the field's disciplinary ambition to represent, authoritatively, the postcolonial per se necessarily but also problematically circumscribes and limits its relation (...)
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  22.  34
    Philosophical representation of female artistic images in objectivism.A. O. Muntian - 2019 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 15:134-144.
    Purpose. Based on actualization of gender discursive features, the current piece aims to clarify and accentuate the manifestation of gender-philosophical ideas interaction: feminism in the framework of objectivism. The source material for the current article is a novel by Ayn Rand "Atlas Shrugged", which is a philosophical work on objectivism. Theoretical basis. The development of the gender discourse, in particular the discourse of feminism is researched from the retrospective angle. This piece is an attempt to underline peculiarities of female artistic (...)
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  23. Open Form and the Shape of Ideas: Literary Structures as Representations of Philosophical Concepts in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.Oscar Kenshur - 1991 - Diderot Studies 24:204-205.
     
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  24.  26
    The Rhetoric of Space: Literary and Artistic Representation of Landscape in Republican and Augustan Rome (review).Raymond Adolph Prier - 1990 - Philosophy and Literature 14 (1):163-164.
  25.  19
    Women in revolution 1848/49: History and fictional representation in literary texts by German women writers.Rachel McNicholl - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):225-233.
  26.  24
    Looking Backward: Representations of Childhood in Literary Work.Susan Engel - 1999 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 33 (1):50.
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  27.  57
    Art and Testimony: The Representation of Historical Horror in Literary Works by Piotr Rawicz and Charlotte Delbo.Lea Fridman Hamaoui - 1991 - Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature 3 (2):243-259.
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  28.  70
    Literary Racial Impersonation.Joy Shim - 2021 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 8.
    Literary racial impersonation occurs when a narrative work fails to express the perspective of a minority ethnic or racial group. Interestingly, even when these works express moral themes congenial to promoting empathetic responses towards these groups, they can be met with public outrage if the group’s perspective is portrayed inaccurately. My goal in this paper is to vindicate the intuition that failure to express the perspective of a minority group well renders the work defective, both aesthetically and morally. I (...)
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  29.  90
    Literary uniqueness and critical communication.Salvator Cannavo & Lawrence W. Hyman - 1965 - British Journal of Aesthetics 5 (2):144-158.
    We shall give reconsideration to the problem of communicating the allegedly unique and unprecedented aspects that may be possessed by a literary work. In doing this we will distinguish two senses of uniqueness. The first of these, which we call objective uniqueness, is communicated without fundamental difficulty. It is given by a definite description in terms of properties which are entirely familiar but which occur in an unprecedented combination. Criticism’s overall task, however, demands concern for a second notion of (...)
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  30.  26
    The Triangle of Representation.Christopher Prendergast - 2000 - Columbia University Press.
    Moving deftly among literary and visual arts, as well as the modern critical canon, Christopher Prendergast's book explores the meaning and value of representation as both a philosophical challenge (What does it mean to create an image that "stands for" something absent?) and a political issue (Who has the right to represent whom?). _The Triangle of Representation_ raises a range of theoretical, historical, and aesthetic questions, and offers subtle readings of such cultural critics as Raymond Williams, Paul de Man, (...)
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  31.  14
    On Representation: Deleuze and Coetzee on the Colonized Subject.Grant Hamilton - 2011 - Editions Rodopi.
    In this important new study, Hamilton establishes and develops innovative links between the sites of postcolonial literary theory, the fiction of the South African/Australian academic and Nobel Prize-winning writer J.M. Coetzee, and the work of the French poststructuralist philosopher Gilles Deleuze. Centering on the key postcolonial problematic of representation, Hamilton argues that if one approaches the colonial subject through Gilles Deleuze’s rewriting of subjectivity, then a transcendent configuration of the colonial subject is revealed. Importantly, it is this rendition of (...)
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  32.  24
    Voluptuous philosophy: literary materialism in the French Enlightenment.Natania Meeker - 2006 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Eighteenth-century France witnessed the rise of matter itself—in forms ranging from atoms to anatomies—as a privileged object of study. Voluptuous Philosophy redefines what is at stake in the emergence of an enlightened secular materialism by showing how questions of figure—how should a body be represented? What should the effects of this representation be on readers?—are tellingly and consistently located at the very heart of 18th-century debates about the nature of material substance. French materialisms of the Enlightenment are crucially invested not (...)
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  33.  76
    The serpent and the rope on stage: Popular, literary, and philosophical representations of reality in traditional India.RobertP Goldman - 1986 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 14 (4):349-369.
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  34.  19
    Episodic Literary Movement and Translation: Ideology Embodied in Prefaces.Mir Mohammad Khademnabi - 2021 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 11:404-417.
    This paper discusses translation practices from a historicist viewpoint, contextualizing them in their emerging “episode.” The latter is a concept drawn from sociology of literature and accounts for the rise of certain discourses and ideologies in a society. On the basis of the argument that translation practices are informed by the general literary and socio-cultural milieu in which they are produced and consumed, the paper studies the translators’ prefaces to three translations published between 1953 and 1978—a period dominated by (...)
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  35. Intertextual Representation: On Mimesis as Interpretive Discourse.Michael Riffaterre - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 11 (1):141-162.
    If we try to arrive at the simplest and most universally valid definition of the representation of reality in literature, we may dispense with grammatical features such as verisimilitude or with genres such as realism, since these are not universal categories. Their applicability depends on historical circumstances or authorial intent. The most economic and general definition, however, must at least include the following two features. First, any representation presupposes the existence of its object outside of the text and preexistent to (...)
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  36. Art, representation, and make-belive: essays on the philosophy of Kendall L. Walton.Sonia Sedivy (ed.) - 2021 - New York: Routledge.
    This is the first collection of essays focused on the many faceted work of Kendall L. Walton. Walton has shaped debate about the arts for the last 50 years. He provides a comprehensive framework for understanding the arts in terms of the human capacity of make-believe that shows how different arts-visual, photographic, musical, literary or poetic-can be explained in terms of complex structures of pretense, perception, imagining, empathy and emotion. His ground-breaking work has been taken beyond aesthetics to address (...)
     
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  37.  19
    Gender representation in children's literature: 1900-1984.Bernice A. Pescosolido & Elizabeth Grauerholz - 1989 - Gender and Society 3 (1):113-125.
    This article explores trends in the presence and centrality of males and females in American children's picture books in the twentieth century. Using the Children's Catalog as a population base and a time series analysis, we found that the imbalance in depicting males and females varies through the century in a curvilinear fashion. The earlier and later periods of the century show more egalitarian representations of females in titles and central roles. However, when stories involving only adults or animal (...)
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  38.  14
    Representation and its Discontents: The Critical Legacy of German Romanticism.Azade Seyhan - 1992 - University of California Press.
    Azade Seyhan provides a concise, elegantly argued introduction to the critical theory of German Romanticism and demonstrates how its approach to the metaphorical and linguistic nature of knowledge is very much alive in contemporary philosophy and literary theory. Her analysis of key thinkers such as Friedrich Schlegel and Novalis explores their views on rhetoric, systematicity, hermeneutics, and cultural interpretation. Seyhan examines German Romanticism as a critical intervention in the debates on representation, which developed in response to the philosophical revolution (...)
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  39.  50
    Living icons: Tracing a motif in verbal and visual representation from the second to fourth centuries C.e.James A. Francis - 2003 - American Journal of Philology 124 (4):575-600.
    This paper traces the development of a deliberate and intense emphasis on visuality in literary representation of the second through fourth centuries C.E., resulting in a new cultural phenomenon: attributing the characteristics and functions of images to living persons. Calling on a range of sources from Lucian's Eikones to the Life of St. Daniel the Stylite and recent scholarship in art history and critical theory, the paper analyzes a series of interfaces between verbal and visual representation in terms of (...)
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  40.  51
    The Sublime Subject of Literary Analysis: A Žižekian Reading of D. H. Lawrence.Vicky Panossian - 2018 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 12 (3).
    This article aims to present a Žižekian reading of the British author David Herbert Lawrence. The contemporary continental philosopher has tackled each of the British author’s reoccurring themes individually and thus may be used as a keystone for a valid literary interpretatio n. The paper begins by shedding light on the representation of Western ideology, moves further into the comprehension of the impacts of modern cultural capital and the limitations of industrialization. While at the same time the dissertation targets (...)
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  41. Literary Interventions in Justice: A Symposium.Kate Kirkpatrick, Rafe McGregor & Karen Simecek - 2021 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 58 (2):160-78.
    The purpose of this symposium is to explore the ways in which literature, broadly construed to include poetry and narrative in a variety of modes of representation, can change the world by providing interventions in justice. Our approach foregrounds the relationship between the activity demanded by some individual literary works and some categories of literary work on the one hand and the way in which those works can make a tangible difference to social reality on the other. We (...)
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  42. Reading zoos: representations of animals and captivity.Randy Malamud - 1998 - New York: New York University Press.
    A caged animal in the heart of the city, thousands of miles from its natural habitat, neurotically pacing in its confinement . . . Zoos offer a convenient way to indulge a cultural appetite for novelty and diversion, and to teach us, albeit superficially, about animals. Yet what, conversely, do they tell us about the people who create, maintain, and patronize them, and about animal captivity in general? Rather than foster an appreciation for the lives and attributes of animals, zoos, (...)
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  43.  59
    Beyond Representation: Philosophy and Poetic Imagination.Richard Thomas Eldridge (ed.) - 1996 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The essays in this 1996 volume explore the ways in which traditional philosophical problems about self-knowledge, self-identity, and value have migrated into literature since the Romantic and Idealist periods. How do so-called literary works take up these problems in a new way? What conception of the subject is involved in this literary practice? How are the lines of demarcation between philosophy and literature problematised? The contributors examine these issues with reference both to Romantic and Idealist writers and to (...)
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  44.  56
    Representation and Misrepresentation.E. H. Gombrich - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 11 (2):195.
    It is a thankless task to have to reply to Professor Murray Krieger’s “Retrospective.” Qui s’excuse, s’accuse, and since I cannot ask my readers to embark on their own retrospective of my writings and test them for consistency, I have little chance of restoring my reputation in their eyes. Hence I would have been happier to leave Professor Krieger to his agonizing, if he did not present himself the “spokesman” for a significant body of theorists who appear to have acclaimed (...)
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  45. Of literary universals: Ninety-five theses.Patrick Colm Hogan - 2008 - Philosophy and Literature 32 (1):pp. 145-160.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Of Literary Universals:Ninety-Five ThesesPatrick Colm Hogan1. There is no such thing as human culture or human cultural difference without human universality.1 (A parallel point about understanding human cultural difference was made by Donald Davidson.2) Alternatively, cultural difference is variation on human universality.2. It follows that every area of a culture manifests human universality. (Otherwise, those cultural areas would not exist.) It does not follow that all areas of (...)
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  46.  46
    Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination (review).Jo-Ann Shelton - 2001 - American Journal of Philology 122 (4):599-604.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Slavery and the Roman Literary ImaginationJo-Ann SheltonWilliam Fitzgerald. Slavery and the Roman Literary Imagination. Roman Literature and Its Contexts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. xii + 129 pp. Cloth, $54.95; paper, $18.95.The study of slavery poses significant challenges for classical scholars. Slaves were numerous and ubiquitous in Roman society, and their almost constant presence surely affected the thoughts and behaviors of free persons. Many ancient writers, (...)
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  47.  22
    The Literary Relation to the Other in the Greek Tragic Text.Ian Maley - 2019 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 33 (3):501-511.
    Reading literature allows for an experience of the Other1 that necessarily implies distance, blindness and unsurpassable separation. The writer reaches the reader through text, the sole means for the reader to encounter the writer in her work. Writing and reading are essentially and inescapably mediated activities where the two poles reach each other through a curtain or a screen, a mask without a face. A writer may read her own text, or she may give it to others, but she can (...)
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  48.  47
    Art, Representation, and Make-Believe: Essays on the Philosophy of Kendall L. Walton.Sonia Sedivy (ed.) - 2021 - New York: Routledge.
    This is the first collection of essays focused on the many-faceted work of Kendall L. Walton. Walton has shaped debate about the arts for the last 50 years. He provides a comprehensive framework for understanding the arts in terms of the human capacity of make-believe that shows how different arts--visual, photographic, musical, literary, or poetic--can be explained in terms of complex structures of pretense, perception, imagining, empathy, and emotion. His ground-breaking work has been taken beyond aesthetics to address foundational (...)
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  49.  10
    Revolution of the ordinary: literary studies after Wittgenstein, Austin, and Cavell.Toril Moi - 2017 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    This radically original book argues for the power of ordinary language philosophy—a tradition inaugurated by Ludwig Wittgenstein and J. L. Austin, and extended by Stanley Cavell—to transform literary studies. In engaging and lucid prose, Toril Moi demonstrates this philosophy’s unique ability to lay bare the connections between words and the world, dispel the notion of literature as a monolithic concept, and teach readers how to learn from a literary text. Moi first introduces Wittgenstein’s vision of language and theory, (...)
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  50.  24
    Self-Representation and Illusion in Senecan Tragedy.Cedric A. J. Littlewood - 2004 - Oxford University Press.
    Seneca the Younger's tragedies are adaptations from the Greek. C. A. J. Littlewood emphasizes the place of these plays in the Latin literature and in the philosophical context of the reign of the emperor Nero. Stoics dismissed public reality as theatre, as illusion. The artificiality of Senecan tragedy, the consciousness that its own dramatic worlds are literary constructs, responds to this contemporary philosophical perception.
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