وبلاگ بلیان

Variations on the Ethics of Mourning in Modern Literature in French

معرفی کتاب «Variations on the Ethics of Mourning in Modern Literature in French» نوشتهٔ Jean Khalfa; Carole Bourne-Taylor; Sara-Louise Cooper، منتشرشده توسط نشر Peter Lang Limited در سال 2021. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

How does modern writing in French grapple with the present absence and absent presence of lost loved ones? This book explores the question from the Revolution to the COVID pandemic, showing how mourning blurs the boundaries between the personal and the historical, the aesthetic and the ethical. «From Freud and psychoanalysis to Derrida and philosophy, the question of mourning has been central to a whole strain of modern thought, especially in France. This fascinating and illuminating collection of essays explores the question in a wide range of intellectual and literary settings, from the French Revolution down through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It is a tour de force.» (Christopher Prendergast FBA, King's College, Cambridge) «This volume compellingly explores the intersection of ethics and aesthetics, showing how literature can enrich our sense of the complexity of mourning, grief and loss. It provides a significant contribution to scholarship on mourning, understood as a never-ending process of relationality.» (Hanna Meretoja, University of Turku, Finland) How does modern writing in French grapple with the present absence and absent presence of lost loved ones? How might it challenge and critique the relegation of certain deaths to the realm of the unmournable? What might this reveal about the role of the literary in the French and francophone world and shifting conceptions of the nation-state? Essays on texts from the Revolution to the present day explore these questions from a variety of perspectives, bringing out the ways in which mourning contests the boundaries between the personal and the historical, the aesthetic and the ethical, the self and the other, and ultimately reasserting its truly critical resonance. Cover Contents Préface (Dominique Rabaté) Preface (Dominique Rabaté: Translation by Stephen Romer) Acknowledgements Introduction (Carole Bourne-Taylor) Part I Unmournable Revolutions Impossible Mourning:: Funeral Orations for Louis XVI (1814–1815) (Benjamin Thurston) Unmourned Histories in Gustave Flaubert’s L’Éducation sentimentale (Rachel Benoît) Part II Inconsolable (Af)filiations The Rhythm of Mourning in Proust (with Barthes and Derrida) (Jennifer Rushworth) Mourning Their Mothers: Roland Barthes, Jacques Derrida and the Gift of Tears (Henriette Korthals Altes) With Barthes and Derrida in ‘the Margins of a Funereal Song’:: The Poetics of Maternal Mourning in the Work of Abdelkébir Khatibi (Khalid Lyamlahy) Mourning the Mother, Mourning the World: : Patrick Chamoiseau’s La Matière de l’absence (Sara-Louise Cooper) Part III Poéthique: Between New Elegy and Anti-Elegy ‘The Door Pushed Back the Light’: : On a Phenomenology of Mourning in Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Jacques Roubaud (Ariane Mildenberg) The Ends and Beginnings of Language in Valérie Rouzeau’s Pas revoir (Daisy Sainsbury) Poethic Justice:: Re-incarnations in Emmanuel Merle’s Poetry (Carole Bourne-Taylor) Conclusion: Mourning in Motion from Ireland to the Caribbean (Sara-Louise Cooper) Notes on Contributors Index Series page « How does modern writing in French grapple with the present absence and absent presence of lost loved ones? How might it challenge and critique the relegation of certain deaths to the realm of the unmournable? What might this reveal about the role of the literary in the French and francophone world and shifting conceptions of the nation state? Essays from the Revolution to the present day explore these questions from a variety of perspectives, bringing out the ways in which mourning blurs the boundaries between the personal and the historical, the aesthetic and the ethical, the self and the other, and ultimately reasserting its truly critical resonance as a concept »-- Résumé de l'éditeur "How does modern writing in French grapple with the present absence and absent presence of lost loved ones? How might it challenge and critique the relegation of certain deaths to the realm of the unmournable? What might this reveal about the role of the literary in the French and francophone world and shifting conceptions of the nation state? Essays from the Revolution to the present day explore these questions from a variety of perspectives, bringing out the ways in which mourning blurs the boundaries between the personal and the historical, the aesthetic and the ethical, the self and the other, and ultimately reasserting its truly critical resonance as a concept"-- Provided by publisher
دانلود کتاب Variations on the Ethics of Mourning in Modern Literature in French