Cover of Charles Bambach: Thinking the Poetic Measure of Justice

Charles Bambach Thinking the Poetic Measure of Justice

Holderlin-Heidegger-Celan

Price for Eshop: 1206 Kč (€ 48.2)

VAT 0% included

New

E-book delivered electronically online

E-Book information

State University of New York Press

2013

EPub
How do I buy e-book?

346

978-1-4384-4582-3

1-4384-4582-2

Annotation

What is the measure of ethics? What is the measure of justice? And how do we come to measure the immeasurability of these questions? Thinking the Poetic Measure of Justice situates the problem of justice in the interdisciplinary space between philosophy and poetry in an effort to explore the sources of ethical life in a new way. Charles Bambach engages the works of two philosophical poets who stand as the bookends of modernity-Friedrich Holderlin (1770-1843) and Paul Celan (1920-1970)-offering close textual readings of poems from each that define and express some of the crucial problems of German philosophical thought in the twentieth century: tensions between the native and the foreign, the proper and the strange, the self and the other. At the center of this philosophical conversation between Holderlin and Celan, Bambach places the work of Martin Heidegger to rethink the question of justice in a nonlegal, nonmoral register by understanding it in terms of poetic measure. Focusing on Holderlin's and Heidegger's readings of pre-Socratic philosophy and Greek tragedy, as well as on Celan's reading of Kabbalah, he frames the problem of poetic justice against the trauma of German destruction in the twentieth century.

Ask question

You can ask us about this book and we'll send an answer to your e-mail.