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The paradoxes of posterity / Benjamin Hoffmann ; translated by Alan J. Singerman.

De Gruyter Penn State University Press Complete eBook-Package 2020 Available online

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EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Ebook Central University Press Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hoffmann, Benjamin, 1985- author.
Contributor:
Singerman, Alan J., translator.
Language:
English
French
Subjects (All):
Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.).
Mortality.
Authorship--Philosophy.
Authorship.
Authorship--Psychological aspects.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (185 pages)
Place of Publication:
University Park, Pennsylvania : The Pennsylvania State University Press, [2020]
Language Note:
In English and French.
Summary:
The impetus for literary creation has often been explained as an attempt to transcend the mortality of the human condition through a work addressed to future generations. Failing to obtain literal immortality, or to turn their hope towards the spiritual immortality promised by religious systems, literary creators seek a symbolic form of perpetuity granted to the intellectual side of their person in the memory of those not yet born while they write. In this book, Benjamin Hoffmann illuminates the paradoxes inherent in the search for symbolic immortality, arguing that the time has come to find a new answer to the perennial question: Why do people write?Exploring the fields of digital humanities and book history, Hoffmann describes posterity as a network of interconnected memories that constantly evolves by reserving a variable and continuously renegotiated place for works and authors of the past. In other words, the perpetual safeguarding of texts is delegated to a collectivity not only nonexistent at the moment when a writer addresses it, but whose nature is characterized by impermanence and instability. Focusing on key works by Denis Diderot, Étienne-Maurice Falconet, Giacomo Casanova, François-René de Chateaubriand, and Jean-Paul Sartre, Hoffmann considers the authors’ representations of posterity, the representation of authors by posterity, and how to register and preserve works in the network of memories. In doing so, Hoffmann reveals the three great paradoxes in the quest for symbolic immortality: the paradoxes of belief, of identity, and of mediation.Theoretically sophisticated and convincingly argued, this book contends that there is only one truly serious literary problem: the transmission of texts to posterity. It will appeal to specialists in literature, in particular eighteenth-century French literature, as well as scholars and students of philosophy and book history.
Contents:
Frontmatter
Contents
Introduction: Why Do People Write?
The Paradoxes of Belief
First Paradox: The Current Concert and the Distant Melody
Second Paradox: The Lottery and the Ruse
Third Paradox: The Renunciation and the Reward
The Paradoxes of Identity
Fourth Paradox: The Proper Noun and the Common Noun
Fifth Paradox: The Flow and the Entity
Sixth Paradox: The Distance and the Judgement
The Paradoxes of Mediation
Seventh Paradox: The Rosetta Stone and Agrippina’s Thrush
Eighth Paradox: The Manuscript and the USB Key
Ninth Paradox: The Comet and the Astronomer
Conclusion: Why Do People (Still) Write?
Notes
Index
Notes:
First published in French in 2019 by Les éditions de Minuit under the title: Les paradoxes de la postérité.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9780271088372
0271088370
9780271088358
0271088354
OCLC:
1253313932

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