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24+ oeuvres 1,267 utilisateurs 3 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

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(yid) VIAF:71401431

Crédit image: PhilWebb

Œuvres de Paul de Man

Oeuvres associées

Criticism: Major Statements (1964) — Contributeur — 222 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Man, Paul de
Date de naissance
1919-12-06
Date de décès
1983-12-21
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Belgium (birth)
Lieu de naissance
Antwerp, Belgium
Lieu du décès
New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Études
Harvard University (PhD)
University of Brussels
Professions
professor
literary critic
Notice de désambigüisation
VIAF:71401431

Membres

Critiques

Klassikeren over dem alle. Har haft stor betydning for snart sagt alle afarter af dekonstruktion som litteraturkritik og litterær metode.
 
Signalé
AnneHarving | May 23, 2011 |
I wrote my master's thesis on the five of them (J. Hillis Miller) doesn't show above, and both Miller who was teaching at Emory at the time and Derrida, who visited Emory for a week or two looked at it. I don't entirely agree with their own reading of their own writing, but that's what deconstruction is all about, right?
 
Signalé
medievalmama | Feb 4, 2008 |
The Aesthetic Ideology is a very different book than I expected back when it was announced in the late 80s. The work which was originally to appear with this title was supposed to be a summa -- in particular, it was supposed to show how the privileging of aesthetics and aesthetic categories led to ideology -- "the confusion of linguistic with natural reality" -- and nationalistic ideology. It was a project which, seen in hindsight, would have marked a reflection on and critique of de Man's early attraction to a very specific nationalist ideology; this latter would not have been named, of course, but it would have been very difficult to miss the gap between the older man and the younger. Instead, Andrzej Warminski and other former de Man students were tasked with incorporating de Man's remaining unedited papers into a book -- a task that took Warminski, not known for his speed, more than several years. It is good to have this book. The essays in it -- most valuably for me, "The Concept of Irony" -- had been circulating in photocopy since the late '80s. "The Concept of Irony" is a wonderful extension of what de Man had to say in "The Rhetoric of Temporality" from Blindness and Insight. The next best essays -- forgive me for not going over them one by one -- are the ones on Hegel. In "Hegel and the Sublime," he gives his most explicit clue as to what the new work would have been about: he labels as a "confusion" the posited opposition between aesthetics and politics.

The jacket copy writer at the University of Minnesota Press saw fit to describe this book as "a necessary and vital component of your humanities bookshelf." Well, not all at once. But once you have a sense of de Man's idiom and of his projects, it would be very difficult to do without it.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
jkcohen | Oct 9, 2007 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
24
Aussi par
2
Membres
1,267
Popularité
#20,253
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
3
ISBN
59
Langues
8
Favoris
1

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