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Philosophy, revision, critique : rereading practices in Heidegger, Nietzsche, and Emerson / David Wittenberg.

De Gruyter Stanford University Press Backlist eBook-Package 2000-2013 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Wittenberg, David.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Methodology.
Hermeneutics.
Philosophy--Historiography.
Philosophy.
Heidegger, Martin, 1889-1976. Nietzsche.
Heidegger, Martin.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (282 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, 2001.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Philosophers have almost always relegated the topic of revision to the sidelines of their discipline, if they have thought about it at all. This book contends that acts of revision are central and indispensable to the project of philosophizing and that philosophy should be construed essentially as a practice of rereading and rewriting. The book focuses chiefly on Heidegger’s highly influential interpretation of Nietzsche, conducted in lectures during the 1930's and 1940's and published in 1961. The author closely analyzes the rhetorical means by which Heidegger repositions Nietzsche’s thinking within a broad history of metaphysics, even as Heidegger positions his own reinterpretation as that history’s more “proper” reading. The author argues that Heidegger’s revisionist project recasts the philosophical text as paralipsis, a special kind of ironic statement that when “properly” received by the philosophical rereader, expresses what the text did not and could not say. The study of such paraliptical revisionism within the philosophical canon offers a new way of understanding the basic historicity of the philosophical text, a text that is critically indistinguishable from its own future history of interpretations. Philosophy itself is revision, a deeply historicist rereading practice, a continuous reappropriation of its own improper textual past. In addition to being the first book-length published study of Heidegger’s interpretation of Nietzsche, the book also examines the work of Hans-Robert Jauss, Harold Bloom, and other critics of revision. In particular, Ralph Waldo Emerson’s early essays on history, read both with and against Heidegger’s analysis of metaphysics, demonstrate why the historical intervention achieved by revisionist reading is not only a formal and thematic alteration of the past, but also a rhetorical coercion of future interpretive tendencies. No philosophical reader is simply a user or victim of revisionist methods: in rereading philosophical pasts, the reader is the very mechanism by which such interpretive tendencies are first formed into problems or thoughts within the philosophical canon.
Contents:
Front matter
Acknowledgments
Contents
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. The Art of Reading Properly, Part I: The Discordance of Art and Truth
2. The Art of Reading Properly, Part 2: Nietzsche's Philosophy Proper
3. Paralipsis, Part I: A Rhetoric of Rereading
4. Paralipsis, Part 2: Revision as History of Being
Interlude: The Reception of Revision
5. Revision as Canon Formation: Misreading in Harold Bloom
6. Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise: Rereading in Emerson
7. Thought for Food (Eating Eternal Return)
Epilogue: A Suggestion About Canon Formation in Philosophy
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Includes bibliographical references (p. 251-260) and index.
ISBN:
9780804764155
0804764158
OCLC:
56119377

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