Kierkegaard and the Treachery of LoveCambridge University Press, 2002 - 222 sayfa This is a major study of Kierkegaard and love. Amy Laura Hall explores Kierkegaard's description of love's treachery, difficulty, and hope, reading his Works of Love as a text that both deciphers and complicates the central books in his pseudonymous canon: Fear and Trembling, Repetition, Either/Or, and Stages on Life's Way. In all of these works, the characters are, as in real life, complex and incomplete, and the conclusions are perplexing. Hall argues that a spiritual void brings each text into being, and her interpretation is as much about faith as about love. In a style that is both scholarly and lyrical, she intimates answers to some of the puzzles, making a poetic contribution to ethics and the philosophy of religion. |
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Sayfa
Amy Laura Hall. To John Fredric Utz " It is a joy to me to apply this as a small installment on the debt - in which I still wish definitely to remain . " Why , all the souls that were , were forfeit.
Amy Laura Hall. To John Fredric Utz " It is a joy to me to apply this as a small installment on the debt - in which I still wish definitely to remain . " Why , all the souls that were , were forfeit.
Sayfa 2
... debt . Works of Love is not a book regarding love in general . It is aimed at the reader in particular . As his preface makes clear , Kierkegaard intends for each " single individual " to read the text as it applies , ineluctably , to ...
... debt . Works of Love is not a book regarding love in general . It is aimed at the reader in particular . As his preface makes clear , Kierkegaard intends for each " single individual " to read the text as it applies , ineluctably , to ...
Sayfa 8
... debt . This does not mean that Kierkegaard is unconcerned with truth , but that coherence becomes , through his texts , paradoxically de- fined by rupture . Many of the irreligious characters in the pseudonymous texts stumble into an ...
... debt . This does not mean that Kierkegaard is unconcerned with truth , but that coherence becomes , through his texts , paradoxically de- fined by rupture . Many of the irreligious characters in the pseudonymous texts stumble into an ...
Sayfa 12
Maalesef, bu sayfanın içeriği kısıtlanmıştır.
Maalesef, bu sayfanın içeriği kısıtlanmıştır.
Sayfa 14
Maalesef, bu sayfanın içeriği kısıtlanmıştır.
Maalesef, bu sayfanın içeriği kısıtlanmıştır.
İçindekiler
The call to confession in Kierkegaards Works of Love | 11 |
Provoking the question deceiving ourselves in Fear and Trembling | 51 |
The poet the vampire and the girl in Repetition with Works of Love | 83 |
The married man as master thief in EitherOr | 108 |
Seclusion and disclosure in Stages on Lifes Way | 139 |
On the way | 172 |
Notes | 200 |
Works cited | 217 |
221 | |
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Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
able Abraham acknowledge aesthetic Agnes attempt beautiful become beloved beloved's chapter Christ command to love confession consider Constantin context continually contrast deception Diarist divine duty Either/Or engagement erotic eternal ethical existence faithful love Fear and Trembling forgiveness girl God's command God's grace guilt hope humble humility individual infinite debt innocence insists International Kierkegaard Commentary interpretation intimacy Isaac Johannes Judge William Kierkegaard as Religious Kierkegaard describes Kierkegaard explains knight knight of faith lives Louis Mackey love truly love WL love's lover Luther's marriage Mercer University Press merely merman moral Mount Moriah narrative neighbor one's oneself ourselves perceive poet poetic possibility predicament pseudonymous texts reader redemption relation relationship remain repentance requires reveals Robert Perkins seeks Silentio Søren Kierkegaard speak Stages on Life's Stephen Evans story task tion true love truly truth understanding Walsh University wherein wife woman young man's