Melville Philosophy Beside Itself: On Deconstruction and Modernism
Andrzej Readings in Interpretation: Hegel, Heidegger
Jose Antonio Maravall Culture of the Baroque: Analysis of a Historical Structure
Cixous and Catherine Clement The Newly Born Woman Klaus Male Fantasies, 2.
Andrzej Readings in Interpretation: Hegel, Heidegger
Jose Antonio Maravall Culture of the Baroque: Analysis of a Historical Structure
Cixous and Catherine Clement The Newly Born Woman Klaus Male Fantasies, 2.
Peter-Sloterdijk-Thinker-on-Stage
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
subjectivity, 87-89; and also Tragedy
See
? ? Jacob, 98 n. 16
Ebeling, Hans, 97 n. 5 (ch. 3)
103
? ? 104
Ecce Homo, 22, 26, 34, 97 n. 4 ? 4), 98 n. 15
Egotism: and altruism, 49
der der Kunst (End of of Art), 100 n. 8
Enlightenment: and drama, i-ii, 88; and intelligence, 66; and morality, 82-83; and politics, 77-78; and subjectivity, ? and tragedy, 19-20, 57
Ethics: and illusion, 79-80; and taste, 64. See also Morality
Euripides, 87
Foucault, Michel,
Frank, Manfred, 25-26
French Revolution: and modernity, 85
Freud, ? 9, 13, 19, 53, 85. See also
Psychoanalysis
Friedrich Nietzsche in ? ? 96 n. 5
Gay Science, 35-36, 60-62; birth of, 7, 52
Gay ? The (Der Wissenschaft), 43, 57, 98 n. 10
INDEX
Illusion: and ethics, 79-80; and idealism, 36-37; and truth, 39-43
Individual: and intoxication, 23-24; and philosophy, 73; and politics, 89-90; and primordial pain, 37. See also Self, Subject, Subjectivity
Institution: and reality, 76
Intelligence: and enlightenment, 66 Interpretation: and classical text, 3-5; and
? ? ? philology, 5-7
Intoxication: and individual, 23-24
Jung, 85 Justice: and morality,
Kant, Immanuel, 19 Kaufmann, Walter, 95 n. 1 (ch.
(ch. 2), 98 n. 10, 99 n. 5 Kierkegaard, S0ren, 13
95 n. 1
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Genius: cult of, 19 Goethe, Johann
66 Der, 75
Habermas, Jurgen, 91
Hebbel, Friedrich, 70
Heidegger, Martin, 56-57, 64, 85, 89, 97 n. 6;
on art and philosophy, 42; and Nietzsche's
metaphysics, 47 Heine, 13
see Antiquity Heraclitus, 19, 57, 59
History: and drama,
96 n. 4; and subjectivity, 21
Ho Chi Minh, 77
46, 77
Hoffmann, E. 13 Friedrich, 89
Homer,
Honnefelder, Gottfried, i Human, All-Too-Human
Menschlich), 3
Idealism: and illusion, 36-37 Ideology: Nietzsche's critique of, 37
Alexander, 13
Knowledge: and modernity, 12; and truth,
38-39
Der (The God to Come), 26 100 n. 8
Kynicism ? 59; and cynicism, 97 n. 4 (ch. 4); and ontology, 47
Laertius, 58, 59
Language: and body, ? 67, 83; and orality,
63; and self, 67; and truth, 62-63, 83. See
also Logos
Lenin, V. ? 21; and truth, 62 Lichtenberg, Georg, 12
Literature: and philosophy, 60; and theory, Lives and Thoughts of ? Famous
Philosophers, 58
Logos: and culture, 68; and physis, 67,
See also Language Lying: and truth, 37-38
96 n. 4
77 Madness: and subject, 70
Magic Flute, The (Die
Magic Mountain, The (Der Zauberberg), 96
n. 7
Mann, Thomas: and interpretation of
Nietzsche, 6-7 Marx, Karl, 77 Mask: and self, 44
12
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? philosophy of,
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 96 n. 7
? ? ? ? INDEX
Materialism: and modernity, 83-85. See also Body, Physis
Maurice, 87 Metaphor: and philosophy, 67
Metaphysics: Nietzsche's relation to, 47 Modernity: and antiquity, 8-9, 15-16, 18-19, 34-35; and depth psychology, 86-87; and
knowledge, 12; and materialism, 83-85; and politics, 76-77; and religion, 77; and subjectivity, 86; and unconscious, 85-86. See also
Mood: and taste, 64; and truth, 64 Morality: and enlightenment, 82-83; and
justice, 81-82; and politics, 77-78; and subjectivity, 80-82; and truth, ? See also Ethics
Mozart, W. 35
Music: and drama, 30; and Nietzsche's writing,
6-8; and philology, 8-9; and philosophy, 58 Robert,
Nach Nietzsche, 97 n. 4 (ch. 4), 99 n. 5 Nietzsche, Elisabeth, 45
Nietzsche, 97 n. 6
Nietzsche, Karl Ludwig, 8
Nihilism: and will to power, 47, 49 Novalis, 13
Ontology: and kynicism, 47 Orality: and language, 63 Other: and unified subject, 25
Paz, Octavio,
Philology: and aesthetics and science, 15-16;
and autonomous subject, 16-17; and 5-7; and music, 8-9;
Nietzsche's "subversion" of, 14; and
philosophy, 18-19
Philosophy: and art, 42; of history,
105
Politics: and aesthetics, 77-79; and algodicy, 77-79; and Christianity, 78-79; and modernity, 76-78; and morality, 77-78; and subjectivity, 74-77, 89-90
Postmodern condition: and philosophy of history, 96
Primordial pain ? 9, 82, 87; and individual, 37; and truth, 38-39, 41-42
Proust, ? 97 n. 1
Psychoanalysis: and subjectivity, 16-17, 88.
See also Freud
Psychology: depth, 16-17, 86-87; and drama,
60; and taste, 64; and truth, 38-39 Psychonautics, 34, 36, 43, 61, 84-85; and
therapeutics, 89-90 Pythagoreanism, 97 n. 2
Reality: and institution, 76
Religion: and modernity, 77. See also
Christianity
Representation: and sign, 40; and truth, 40-41 Republican Automatons, 66
Ritschl, Friedrich, 8, 10
Rohde, Erwin,
Romanticism: and self, 26
Schliemann, 16
Schopenhauer, Arthur, 8, 10, 12, 19, 36, 37,
58
Schulte, ? 95 n. 2 (ch. 2)
Science: and aesthetics, 15-16; and art, 12 Self: and drama, 17, 23-24; and language, 67;
and mask, 44; and romanticism, 26; search for, 33-34; and truth, ? 40-43; and value, 44-45; and will to power, 46. See
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? also
Self-knowledge 34
Subject, Subjectivity
and theory,
? ? ? 96 Sign: and
n. 4; and individual, 73; and literature, 60; Socialism: aesthetic, 28
40
death of, 72 97 n. 3 (ch. 4)
30-32, 80-83; and madness,
? ? and metaphor, 67; and music, 58; and Socrates, 50, 57-58, philology, 18-19; and physis, 59; and die
? ? ? ? tragedy, 50-73 55-56
and truth, 38-39, Spengler, Oswald, 20 Subject: autonomous,
? ? ? ? and logos, 67, ? 73; and and enlightenment,
philosophy, 59. See also Body Plato, 58
Platonism, 97 n. 2; Christian, and metaphysics, 67-68
70; modern, 15-16; and politics, 74-77; and ? 88; and symbol, 30; and truth, 37; unified. ? unified, and other, 25. See also Individual, Self
? ? 106
Subjectivity: and drama, 87-89; and enlightenment, 86-89; and history, ? and modernity, 86; and morality, 80-82; and psychoanalysis, 16-17. See also Individual, Self
INDEX
38-39, 41-42; and
search for, 37-38; and self, 22-23,
42-43; and subject, 37; and terror, 52; and will to power, 45-48
Unconscious: and modernity, 85-86. See also Psychoanalysis
Untimely Meditations, 34-35 Usener, Hermann,
Value: and culture, ? and self, 44-45 Virtue: and vice, 48-49. See also Ethics,
Morality Voltaire, 62
Wagner,
Wagner, Richard, 7, 8, 10-12, 14, ? 20, 22,
26, 35, 36, 43, 58; cult of, ? 13, 61-62
von, 14 Will to power: and nihilism, 47, 49; and self,
46; and tranquillity. 48; and truth, 45-48 Will to Power, The (Der ? zur ? 45
Zauberbaum, Der (The Magic Tree), 99 n. 7
? ? ? ? Syllogismen der
Symbol: and subject, 30
97 n. 5 (ch. 4)
? Taste: and ethics. 64; and mood, 64; and psychology, 64. See also Aesthetics
? ? ? Terror: and truth, 52 Theory: and literature, Therapeutics: and Thus Spoke
89-90
? ? ? (Also Sprach Zarathustra), 13, 15, 33, ? 45, 50,
64, 68, 72, 74
Tragedy: and culture, 53-54; and
enlightenment, 19-20; and philosophy,
50-73 passim. See also Drama Tranquillity: and will to power, 48 Truth: and art, 42-43, 45-46; and drama,
17-18; and illusion, 39-43; and knowledge, 38-39; and language, ? 62-63; and mood, 64; and morality, ? and philosophy, 55-56; and primordial pain,
? ? ? ? ? Theory and History of Literature
? ? V olume
Volume
V olume
Volume Volume
Volume
V olume Volume V olume
V olume
V olume V olume V olume Volume
V olume V olume
V olume V olume
V olume V olume V olume
V olume
V olume V olume Volume
Volume Volume
26.
24. 23.
22.
20.
14.
10. 9.
5. 4.
Melville Philosophy Beside Itself: On Deconstruction and Modernism
Andrzej Readings in Interpretation: Hegel, Heidegger
Jose Antonio Maravall Culture of the Baroque: Analysis of a Historical Structure
Cixous and Catherine Clement The Newly Born Woman Klaus Male Fantasies, 2. Male Bodies:
Psychoanalyzing the White Terror
Klaus Theweleit Male Fantasies, Women, Floods, Bodies,
History
Alloula The Colonial Harem
Lyotard and Jean-Loup Just Gaming Jay Caplan Framed Narratives: Diderot's Genealogy of the
Beholder
Thomas G. Pavel The Poetics of Plot: The Case of English
Renaissance Drama
Michel de Certeau Heterologies
Jacques Attali Noise
Peter Szondi On Textual Understanding and Other Essays
Georges Bataille Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927-1939
Tzvetan Todorov Mikhail Bakhtin: The Dialogical Principle Ross Chambers Story and Situation: Narrative Seduction and
the Power of Fiction
Edited by John Fekete The Structural Allegory: Reconstructive
Encounters with the New French Thought
Lyotard The Postmodern Condition: A Report on
Knowledge
Erich Auerbach Scenes from the Drama of European Literature
Mikhail Bakhtin Problems of ? Poetics
Paul de Man Blindness and Insight: Essays in the Rhetoric of
Contemporary Criticism 2nd rev.
Edited by Jonathan Godzich, and Wallace Martin
The Yale Critics: Deconstruction in America Vladimir Propp Theory and History of Folklore
Peter Burger Theory of the Avant-Garde
Hans Robert Jauss Aesthetic Experience and Literary
Hermeneutics
Hans Robert Jauss Toward an Aesthetic of Reception
Tzvetan Todorov Introduction to Poetics
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
See
? ? Jacob, 98 n. 16
Ebeling, Hans, 97 n. 5 (ch. 3)
103
? ? 104
Ecce Homo, 22, 26, 34, 97 n. 4 ? 4), 98 n. 15
Egotism: and altruism, 49
der der Kunst (End of of Art), 100 n. 8
Enlightenment: and drama, i-ii, 88; and intelligence, 66; and morality, 82-83; and politics, 77-78; and subjectivity, ? and tragedy, 19-20, 57
Ethics: and illusion, 79-80; and taste, 64. See also Morality
Euripides, 87
Foucault, Michel,
Frank, Manfred, 25-26
French Revolution: and modernity, 85
Freud, ? 9, 13, 19, 53, 85. See also
Psychoanalysis
Friedrich Nietzsche in ? ? 96 n. 5
Gay Science, 35-36, 60-62; birth of, 7, 52
Gay ? The (Der Wissenschaft), 43, 57, 98 n. 10
INDEX
Illusion: and ethics, 79-80; and idealism, 36-37; and truth, 39-43
Individual: and intoxication, 23-24; and philosophy, 73; and politics, 89-90; and primordial pain, 37. See also Self, Subject, Subjectivity
Institution: and reality, 76
Intelligence: and enlightenment, 66 Interpretation: and classical text, 3-5; and
? ? ? philology, 5-7
Intoxication: and individual, 23-24
Jung, 85 Justice: and morality,
Kant, Immanuel, 19 Kaufmann, Walter, 95 n. 1 (ch.
(ch. 2), 98 n. 10, 99 n. 5 Kierkegaard, S0ren, 13
95 n. 1
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Genius: cult of, 19 Goethe, Johann
66 Der, 75
Habermas, Jurgen, 91
Hebbel, Friedrich, 70
Heidegger, Martin, 56-57, 64, 85, 89, 97 n. 6;
on art and philosophy, 42; and Nietzsche's
metaphysics, 47 Heine, 13
see Antiquity Heraclitus, 19, 57, 59
History: and drama,
96 n. 4; and subjectivity, 21
Ho Chi Minh, 77
46, 77
Hoffmann, E. 13 Friedrich, 89
Homer,
Honnefelder, Gottfried, i Human, All-Too-Human
Menschlich), 3
Idealism: and illusion, 36-37 Ideology: Nietzsche's critique of, 37
Alexander, 13
Knowledge: and modernity, 12; and truth,
38-39
Der (The God to Come), 26 100 n. 8
Kynicism ? 59; and cynicism, 97 n. 4 (ch. 4); and ontology, 47
Laertius, 58, 59
Language: and body, ? 67, 83; and orality,
63; and self, 67; and truth, 62-63, 83. See
also Logos
Lenin, V. ? 21; and truth, 62 Lichtenberg, Georg, 12
Literature: and philosophy, 60; and theory, Lives and Thoughts of ? Famous
Philosophers, 58
Logos: and culture, 68; and physis, 67,
See also Language Lying: and truth, 37-38
96 n. 4
77 Madness: and subject, 70
Magic Flute, The (Die
Magic Mountain, The (Der Zauberberg), 96
n. 7
Mann, Thomas: and interpretation of
Nietzsche, 6-7 Marx, Karl, 77 Mask: and self, 44
12
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? philosophy of,
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 96 n. 7
? ? ? ? INDEX
Materialism: and modernity, 83-85. See also Body, Physis
Maurice, 87 Metaphor: and philosophy, 67
Metaphysics: Nietzsche's relation to, 47 Modernity: and antiquity, 8-9, 15-16, 18-19, 34-35; and depth psychology, 86-87; and
knowledge, 12; and materialism, 83-85; and politics, 76-77; and religion, 77; and subjectivity, 86; and unconscious, 85-86. See also
Mood: and taste, 64; and truth, 64 Morality: and enlightenment, 82-83; and
justice, 81-82; and politics, 77-78; and subjectivity, 80-82; and truth, ? See also Ethics
Mozart, W. 35
Music: and drama, 30; and Nietzsche's writing,
6-8; and philology, 8-9; and philosophy, 58 Robert,
Nach Nietzsche, 97 n. 4 (ch. 4), 99 n. 5 Nietzsche, Elisabeth, 45
Nietzsche, 97 n. 6
Nietzsche, Karl Ludwig, 8
Nihilism: and will to power, 47, 49 Novalis, 13
Ontology: and kynicism, 47 Orality: and language, 63 Other: and unified subject, 25
Paz, Octavio,
Philology: and aesthetics and science, 15-16;
and autonomous subject, 16-17; and 5-7; and music, 8-9;
Nietzsche's "subversion" of, 14; and
philosophy, 18-19
Philosophy: and art, 42; of history,
105
Politics: and aesthetics, 77-79; and algodicy, 77-79; and Christianity, 78-79; and modernity, 76-78; and morality, 77-78; and subjectivity, 74-77, 89-90
Postmodern condition: and philosophy of history, 96
Primordial pain ? 9, 82, 87; and individual, 37; and truth, 38-39, 41-42
Proust, ? 97 n. 1
Psychoanalysis: and subjectivity, 16-17, 88.
See also Freud
Psychology: depth, 16-17, 86-87; and drama,
60; and taste, 64; and truth, 38-39 Psychonautics, 34, 36, 43, 61, 84-85; and
therapeutics, 89-90 Pythagoreanism, 97 n. 2
Reality: and institution, 76
Religion: and modernity, 77. See also
Christianity
Representation: and sign, 40; and truth, 40-41 Republican Automatons, 66
Ritschl, Friedrich, 8, 10
Rohde, Erwin,
Romanticism: and self, 26
Schliemann, 16
Schopenhauer, Arthur, 8, 10, 12, 19, 36, 37,
58
Schulte, ? 95 n. 2 (ch. 2)
Science: and aesthetics, 15-16; and art, 12 Self: and drama, 17, 23-24; and language, 67;
and mask, 44; and romanticism, 26; search for, 33-34; and truth, ? 40-43; and value, 44-45; and will to power, 46. See
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? also
Self-knowledge 34
Subject, Subjectivity
and theory,
? ? ? 96 Sign: and
n. 4; and individual, 73; and literature, 60; Socialism: aesthetic, 28
40
death of, 72 97 n. 3 (ch. 4)
30-32, 80-83; and madness,
? ? and metaphor, 67; and music, 58; and Socrates, 50, 57-58, philology, 18-19; and physis, 59; and die
? ? ? ? tragedy, 50-73 55-56
and truth, 38-39, Spengler, Oswald, 20 Subject: autonomous,
? ? ? ? and logos, 67, ? 73; and and enlightenment,
philosophy, 59. See also Body Plato, 58
Platonism, 97 n. 2; Christian, and metaphysics, 67-68
70; modern, 15-16; and politics, 74-77; and ? 88; and symbol, 30; and truth, 37; unified. ? unified, and other, 25. See also Individual, Self
? ? 106
Subjectivity: and drama, 87-89; and enlightenment, 86-89; and history, ? and modernity, 86; and morality, 80-82; and psychoanalysis, 16-17. See also Individual, Self
INDEX
38-39, 41-42; and
search for, 37-38; and self, 22-23,
42-43; and subject, 37; and terror, 52; and will to power, 45-48
Unconscious: and modernity, 85-86. See also Psychoanalysis
Untimely Meditations, 34-35 Usener, Hermann,
Value: and culture, ? and self, 44-45 Virtue: and vice, 48-49. See also Ethics,
Morality Voltaire, 62
Wagner,
Wagner, Richard, 7, 8, 10-12, 14, ? 20, 22,
26, 35, 36, 43, 58; cult of, ? 13, 61-62
von, 14 Will to power: and nihilism, 47, 49; and self,
46; and tranquillity. 48; and truth, 45-48 Will to Power, The (Der ? zur ? 45
Zauberbaum, Der (The Magic Tree), 99 n. 7
? ? ? ? Syllogismen der
Symbol: and subject, 30
97 n. 5 (ch. 4)
? Taste: and ethics. 64; and mood, 64; and psychology, 64. See also Aesthetics
? ? ? Terror: and truth, 52 Theory: and literature, Therapeutics: and Thus Spoke
89-90
? ? ? (Also Sprach Zarathustra), 13, 15, 33, ? 45, 50,
64, 68, 72, 74
Tragedy: and culture, 53-54; and
enlightenment, 19-20; and philosophy,
50-73 passim. See also Drama Tranquillity: and will to power, 48 Truth: and art, 42-43, 45-46; and drama,
17-18; and illusion, 39-43; and knowledge, 38-39; and language, ? 62-63; and mood, 64; and morality, ? and philosophy, 55-56; and primordial pain,
? ? ? ? ? Theory and History of Literature
? ? V olume
Volume
V olume
Volume Volume
Volume
V olume Volume V olume
V olume
V olume V olume V olume Volume
V olume V olume
V olume V olume
V olume V olume V olume
V olume
V olume V olume Volume
Volume Volume
26.
24. 23.
22.
20.
14.
10. 9.
5. 4.
Melville Philosophy Beside Itself: On Deconstruction and Modernism
Andrzej Readings in Interpretation: Hegel, Heidegger
Jose Antonio Maravall Culture of the Baroque: Analysis of a Historical Structure
Cixous and Catherine Clement The Newly Born Woman Klaus Male Fantasies, 2. Male Bodies:
Psychoanalyzing the White Terror
Klaus Theweleit Male Fantasies, Women, Floods, Bodies,
History
Alloula The Colonial Harem
Lyotard and Jean-Loup Just Gaming Jay Caplan Framed Narratives: Diderot's Genealogy of the
Beholder
Thomas G. Pavel The Poetics of Plot: The Case of English
Renaissance Drama
Michel de Certeau Heterologies
Jacques Attali Noise
Peter Szondi On Textual Understanding and Other Essays
Georges Bataille Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927-1939
Tzvetan Todorov Mikhail Bakhtin: The Dialogical Principle Ross Chambers Story and Situation: Narrative Seduction and
the Power of Fiction
Edited by John Fekete The Structural Allegory: Reconstructive
Encounters with the New French Thought
Lyotard The Postmodern Condition: A Report on
Knowledge
Erich Auerbach Scenes from the Drama of European Literature
Mikhail Bakhtin Problems of ? Poetics
Paul de Man Blindness and Insight: Essays in the Rhetoric of
Contemporary Criticism 2nd rev.
Edited by Jonathan Godzich, and Wallace Martin
The Yale Critics: Deconstruction in America Vladimir Propp Theory and History of Folklore
Peter Burger Theory of the Avant-Garde
Hans Robert Jauss Aesthetic Experience and Literary
Hermeneutics
Hans Robert Jauss Toward an Aesthetic of Reception
Tzvetan Todorov Introduction to Poetics
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?