The End of the Poem
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Giorgio Agamben
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Edited by:
Daniel Heller-Roazen
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Translated by:
Daniel Heller-Roazen
and Daniel Heller-Roazen
About this book
This book, by one of Italy's most important and original contemporary philosophers, represents a broad, general, and ambitious undertaking—nothing less than an attempt to rethink the nature of poetic language and to rearticulate relationships among theology, poetry, and philosophy in a tradition of literature initiated by Dante. The author presents "literature" as a set of formal or linguistic genres that discuss or develop theological issues at a certain distance from the discourse of theology. This distance begins to appear in Virgil and Ovid, but it becomes decisive in Dante and in his decision to write in the vernacular. His vernacular Italian reaches back through classical allusion to the Latin that was in his day the language of theology, but it does so with a difference. It is no accident that in the Commedia Virgil is Dante's guide. The book opens with a discussion of just how Dante's poem is a "comedy," and it concludes with a discussion of the "ends of poetry" in a variety of senses: enjambment at the ends of lines, the concluding lines of poems, and the end of poetry as a mode of writing this sort of literature. Of course, to have poetry "end" does not mean that people stop writing it, but that literature passes into a period in which it is concerned with its own ending, with its own bounds and limits, historical and otherwise. Though most of the essays make specific reference to various authors of the Italian literary tradition (including Dante, Polifilo, Pascoli, Delfini, and Caproni), they transcend the confines of Italian literature and engage several other literary and philosophical authors (Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Boethius, the Provençal poets, Mallarmé, and Hölderlin, among others).
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Acknowledgments
vii -
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Contents
ix -
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Preface
xi -
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1 Comedy
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2 Corn: From Anatomy to Poetics
23 -
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3 The Dream of Language
43 -
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4 Pascoli and the Thought of the Voice
62 -
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5 The Dictation of Poetry
76 -
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6 Expropriated Manner
87 -
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7 The Celebration of the Hidden Treasure
102 -
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8 The End of the Poem
109 - Appendix
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A An Enigma Concerning the Basque Woman
119 -
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B The Hunt for Language
124 -
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C The Just Do Not Feed on Light
126 -
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D Taking Leave of Tragedy
130 -
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Notes
135