Literature and Spirit: Essays on Bakhtin and His ContemporariesUniversity Press of Kentucky, 1988 - 166 páginas "If Bakhtin is right," Wayne C. Booth has said, "a very great deal of what we western critics have spent our time on is mistaken, or trivial, or both." In Literature and Spirit David Patterson proceeds from the premise that Bakhtin is right. Exploring Bakhtin's notions of spirit, responsibility, and dialogue, Patterson takes his reader from the narrow arena of literary criticism to the larger realm of human living and human loving. True to the spirit of Bakhtin, he draws the Russian into a vibrant dialogue with other thinkers, including Foucault, Berdyaev, Gide, Lacan, Levinas, and Heidegger. But he does not stop there. He engages Bakhtin in his own insightful and unique dialogue, meeting the responsibility and taking the risk summoned by dialogue. Literature and Spirit, therefore, is not a typically cool and detached exercise in academic curiosity. Instead, it is a passionate and penetrating endeavor to respond to literature and spirit as the links in life's attachment to life. The author demonstrates that in deciding something about literature, we decide something about the substance and meaning of our lives. Far from being a question of commentary or explication, he argues, our relation to literature is a matter of spiritual life and death. The reader who comes before a literary text encounters the human voice. And Patterson enables his reader to hear that voice in all its spiritual dimensions. Unique in its questions and in its quest, Literature and Spirit addresses an audience that goes beyond the ordinary academic categories. It appeals not only to students of literature, philosophy, and religion, but to anyone who seeks an understanding of spiritual presence and meaning in life. Through his affirmation of what is dear, Patterson responds to the needful question. And in his response he puts the question to his audience: Where are you? Literature and Spirit thus speaks to those who face the task of answering, "Here I am." |
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Página 35
... ( Clark and Holquist 80 ) . Before us , in short , is a poetics of spirit . And the stake is spiritual life . POLYPHONIC FORM In their discussion of the Kantian features of Bakhtin's thought , Clark and Holquist tell us , " The systematic ...
... ( Clark and Holquist 80 ) . Before us , in short , is a poetics of spirit . And the stake is spiritual life . POLYPHONIC FORM In their discussion of the Kantian features of Bakhtin's thought , Clark and Holquist tell us , " The systematic ...
Página 67
... Clark and Holquist explain , " That which in his [ Bakhtin's ] epistemology is modeled as the I / other distinction becomes in his aesthetics the distinction between the author , who occupies a position analogous to the self , and the ...
... Clark and Holquist explain , " That which in his [ Bakhtin's ] epistemology is modeled as the I / other distinction becomes in his aesthetics the distinction between the author , who occupies a position analogous to the self , and the ...
Página 98
... Clark and Holquist put it , " or the world between con- sciousnesses " ( 9 ) . Bakhtin insists , for example , that " language , for the individual consciousness , lies on the border between oneself and the other " ( Dialogic 293 ) ...
... Clark and Holquist put it , " or the world between con- sciousnesses " ( 9 ) . Bakhtin insists , for example , that " language , for the individual consciousness , lies on the border between oneself and the other " ( Dialogic 293 ) ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Literature And Spirit: Essays on Bakhtin and His Contemporaries David Patterson Vista previa limitada - 2014 |
Literature And Spirit: Essays on Bakhtin and His Contemporaries David Patterson Vista previa limitada - 2021 |
Términos y frases comunes
activity aesthetic alien answer approach assertion Bakhtin bear become beginning Berdyaev body born brings calls character Christ Clark comes concerns connection consciousness constitutes context create creation death dialogical relation difference discourse Dostoevsky encounter Estetika event existence expression face fact forever Foucault freedom future Gide give hand hear Heidegger Hence hero human idea implications important individual infinite inner interaction Lacan language laughter Levinas lies listener literary literature live madness meaning mind mouth move movement needed never noted novel offering once one's oneself Otherwise ourselves personality poetics position possibility precisely presence Problems puts question reality realm recall refers resolve responsibility revealed saying seeks sense signification silence soul speaker speaks spirit spiritual truth stands statement summons takes thing Third Thou threshold tion transfer truth turn understanding utterance voice whole witness word wound writes