216 research outputs found
âThe hot-house of decadent chronicleâ: Michael Field and the dance of modern verse-drama
This article examines Michael Field's avant-guard poetic dramas post 1895, in particular the Roman Trilogy (The World at Auction, The Race of Leaves, and Julia Domna), to suggest they should be read for their extraordinary poetic experimentation, which precedes, prefigures and is at the heart of modernism's innovations in the genre. It argues that influenced by the works of Friedrich Nietzsche, particularly The Birth of Tragedy, Michael Field turned to Latin decadence and to contemporary German philology to re-energise the genre. The essay also suggests that the Trilogy's emphasis on dance foreshadows the impact of Ballet Russes on modern aesthetics
KĂŒrze und Kometen
Mit BeitrÀgen von Johannes Binotto, Stefan Ramirez Pérez, Hans W. Koch, John Smith, Dietrich Leder, Miriam Gossing/Lina Sieckmann, Friedrich Nietzsche
CurrĂculo e DidĂĄtica da Tradução: vontade, criação e crĂtica
Resumo: Em meio Ă categoria profissional dos professores, o texto interroga o que nos leva a educar e a prosseguir educando; qual Ă© o motor polĂtico e a alegria subjetiva da nossa profissĂŁo; qual Ă© a força de trabalho que traz vitalidade Ă s nossas existĂȘncias? Desde a filosofia da diferença, e como resultado de uma pesquisa de teor ensaĂstico-factual, posiciona-se na perspectiva nietzschiana da vontade de potĂȘncia, constituĂda por problemĂĄticas acerca da especificidade da disposição e do impulso de uma docĂȘncia afirmativa, autoral e criadora. Com o mĂ©todo do jogo de dados, mostra, em suas relaçÔes, um currĂculo tradutor e uma didĂĄtica da tradução, como processos transcriadores da civilização, das culturas e de nĂłs prĂłprios
Time Out of Joint: Hamlet and the Pure Form of Time
The aim of this paper is to explore why Deleuze takes up Hamletâs claim that âtime is out of jointâ. In the first part of this paper, I explore this claim by looking at how Deleuze relates it to Platoâs Timaeus and its conception of the relationship between movement and time. Once we have seen how time functions when it is âin jointâ, I explore what it would mean for time to no longer be understood in terms of an underlying rational structure. The claim can be understood as about a relationship between time and action. In the second part of this paper, I want to relate this new understanding of time to Hamlet itself, in order to see how temporality operates within the play. I will conclude by relating these two different conceptions of time out of joint to one another through Nietzscheâs Eternal Return
White Habits, AntiâRacism, and Philosophy as a Way of Life
This paper examines Pierre Hadotâs philosophy as a way of life in the context of race. I argue that a âway of lifeâ approach to philosophy renders intelligible how anti-racist confrontation of racist ideas and institutionalized white complicity is a properly philosophical way of life requiring regulated reflection on habits â particularly, habits of whiteness. I first rehearse some of Hadotâs analysis of the âway of lifeâ orientation in philosophy, in which philosophical wisdom is understood as cultivated by actions which result in the creation of wise habits. I analyze a phenomenological claim about the nature of habit implied by the âway of lifeâ approach, namely, that habits can be both the cause and the effect of action. This point is central to the âway of lifeâ philosophy, I claim, in that it makes possible the intelligent redirection of habits, in which wise habits are more the effect than simply the cause of action. Lastly, I illustrate the âway of lifeâ approach in the context of anti-racism by turning to Linda MartĂn Alcoffâs whiteness anti-eliminativism, which outlines a morally defensible transformation of the habits of whiteness. I argue that anti-racism provides an intelligible context for modern day forms of what Hadot calls âspiritual exercisesâ insofar as the âway of lifeâ philosophy is embodied in the practice of whites seeing themselves seeing as white and seeing themselves being seen as white
Atheisms and the purification of faith
Philosophers of religion have distinguished between ânegativeâ and âpositiveâ atheism. This article considers further conceptions of atheism, especially the idea that atheism can facilitate a faith in God purified of idolatrous assumptions. After introducing Bultmannâs contention that a âconscious atheistâ can find something transcendent in the world, this contention is interpreted through reflection on Ricoeurâs claim that the atheisms of Nietzsche and Freud serve to mediate a transition to a purified faith â a faith involving heightened receptivity to agapeic love. The troubling question of what differentiates atheism from belief in God is then discussed in the light of Simone Weilâs meditations on Godâs secret presence
âOthers-in-Lawâ: Legalism in the Economy of Religious Differences
Religious legalism encompasses a wide range of attitudes that assign religious meaning to legal content or to legal compliance. The phenomenology of religious legalism is assuming a significant role in various contemporary debates about legal pluralism, accommodation of religious minorities, religious freedom, and so forth. This article revises this conception and the commonplace equation of Judaism and legalism. It suggests that we ought to regard both as part of the economy of religious differences by which religious identities are expressed and defined as alternatives. The common ascription of religious legalism to Judaism (and Islam) is criticized here through a historical analysis of the law-religion-identity matrix in three cultural settings: late ancient Judeo-Hellenic, medieval JudeoâArabic, and post-Reformation Europe
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