Penn State University Press
The Challenge of Coleridge
About this book
Interweaving past and present texts, The Challenge of Coleridge engages the British Romantic poet, critic, and philosopher Samuel Taylor Coleridge in a "conversation" (in Hans-Georg Gadamer’s sense) with philosophical thinkers today who share his interest in the relationship of interpretation to ethics and whose ideas can be both illuminated and challenged by Coleridge’s insights into and struggles with this relationship.
In his philosophy, poetry, theology, and personal life, Coleridge revealed his concern with this issue, as it manifests itself in the relation between technical and ethical discourse, between fact and value, between self and other, and in the ethical function of aesthetic experience and the role of love in interpretation and ethical action.
Relying on Gadamer’s hermeneutics to supply a framework for his approach, Haney connects Coleridge’s ideas with, among others, Emmanuel Levinas’s other-oriented notion of ethical subjectivity, Paul Ricoeur’s view about the other’s implication in the self, reinterpretations of Greek drama by Bernard Williams and Martha Nussbaum, and Gianni Vattimo's post-Nietzschean hermeneutics.
Coleridge is treated not as a product of Romantic ideology to be deconstructed from a modern perspective, but as a writer who offers a "challenge" to our modern tendency to compartmentalize interpretive issues as a concern for literary theorists and ethical issues as a concern for philosophers. Looking at the two together, Haney shows through his reading of Coleridge, can enrich our understanding of both.
Author / Editor information
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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List of Abbreviations
ix -
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Preface
xi -
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Acknowledgments
xvii -
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1 Hermeneutics, Ethics, and Historicism
1 -
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2 Ethics and Art: Problems of Phronesis and Techne
29 -
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3 Knowledge, Being, and Hermeneutics
73 -
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4 Is and Ought in Literature and Life
95 -
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5 Literary Criticism and Moral Philosophy
115 -
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6 Oneself as Another: Coleridgean Subjectivity
173 -
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7 Love, Otherness, and the Absolute Self
227 -
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Notes
263 -
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Works Cited
283 -
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Index
299