Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
Learning to Unlearn
-
Michel Chaouli
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- To Start 1
-
Part 1 Something Speaks to Me (Intimacy)
- Feeling the Pulse of the Text 9
- Some Examples 12
- Poetic Criticism, an Essay 17
- Roland Barthes Has Sushi 18
- What Does the Text Want from Me? 20
- The Impersonality of Intimacy 24
- The Texture of Intimacy 25
- Productive Distrust 28
- Learning to Unlearn 30
- Naïveté 32
- Intimacy, Self-Taught 34
- The Call of Significance 34
- The Authority of the Poetic 37
- Being in History 38
- Being in the Same History (Tradition) 40
- A Bastard of History 43
-
Part 2 I Must Tell You About It (Urgency)
- Understanding and Making 49
- Making the New by Remaking the Old 53
- Learning Not to Conclude 56
- Tact 60
- Playing It by Ear 64
- Poetic Making Conserves as It Renews 67
- Poetic Power 71
- Philological Disarmament 77
- Hearing That We May Speak 79
- Second Thoughts 81
- Self-Reference versus Urgency 82
- Epiphanies 85
- The Intense Life of Language 88
- What and How 90
- The Knot of Experience 92
- Making Freedom 96
-
Part 3 But I Don’t Know How (Opacity)
- Shadow in Plain Sight 103
- The Difficulty of Criticism 108
- The Strange Voice 110
- Aristotle versus Plato 113
- What in Technique Is More Than Technique 115
- What Kind of Thing Is the Poetic Thing? 116
- The Work of Art versus the Poetic Work 119
- The Eye of the Work, the Eye of the Beholder 121
- How to Leap Over One’s Own Shadow 123
- Why Non-Knowing Is the Primal Condition of Poetry 127
- Genius 128
- Criticism Is Making 132
- The Poet of the Poet 133
- Falling 135
- The Difficulty, and the Ecstasy, of Reality 139
- Is Poetry a Deflection from Life? 142
- In Poetry, Non-Knowing Is a Primal Condition 143
- The Social Force of the Impersonal 147
- To Be Continued . . . 153
- Acknowledgments 157
- Notes 159
- Index 165
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- To Start 1
-
Part 1 Something Speaks to Me (Intimacy)
- Feeling the Pulse of the Text 9
- Some Examples 12
- Poetic Criticism, an Essay 17
- Roland Barthes Has Sushi 18
- What Does the Text Want from Me? 20
- The Impersonality of Intimacy 24
- The Texture of Intimacy 25
- Productive Distrust 28
- Learning to Unlearn 30
- Naïveté 32
- Intimacy, Self-Taught 34
- The Call of Significance 34
- The Authority of the Poetic 37
- Being in History 38
- Being in the Same History (Tradition) 40
- A Bastard of History 43
-
Part 2 I Must Tell You About It (Urgency)
- Understanding and Making 49
- Making the New by Remaking the Old 53
- Learning Not to Conclude 56
- Tact 60
- Playing It by Ear 64
- Poetic Making Conserves as It Renews 67
- Poetic Power 71
- Philological Disarmament 77
- Hearing That We May Speak 79
- Second Thoughts 81
- Self-Reference versus Urgency 82
- Epiphanies 85
- The Intense Life of Language 88
- What and How 90
- The Knot of Experience 92
- Making Freedom 96
-
Part 3 But I Don’t Know How (Opacity)
- Shadow in Plain Sight 103
- The Difficulty of Criticism 108
- The Strange Voice 110
- Aristotle versus Plato 113
- What in Technique Is More Than Technique 115
- What Kind of Thing Is the Poetic Thing? 116
- The Work of Art versus the Poetic Work 119
- The Eye of the Work, the Eye of the Beholder 121
- How to Leap Over One’s Own Shadow 123
- Why Non-Knowing Is the Primal Condition of Poetry 127
- Genius 128
- Criticism Is Making 132
- The Poet of the Poet 133
- Falling 135
- The Difficulty, and the Ecstasy, of Reality 139
- Is Poetry a Deflection from Life? 142
- In Poetry, Non-Knowing Is a Primal Condition 143
- The Social Force of the Impersonal 147
- To Be Continued . . . 153
- Acknowledgments 157
- Notes 159
- Index 165