![]() Prolegomenon IV contains readings of Shakespeare and Emily Dickinson, with a certain critical reference to modern cognitivism. the images that were not to be made in the first place): how can you "bow down and serve" the images, or abstain from doing that, if you obeyed the first moment and did not even make them? In the centre of the second Prolegomenon is Aristotle's ambivalent relationship with the "natural talent" (euphuia) for using metaphor, and the third Prolegomenon considers Aristotle's heritage among the modern "metaphoricians and metaphysicians", as well as the anti- or countermetaphoricians, such as Paul de Man and Murray Krieger. The first of these introductory chapters deals with The Second Commandment, or the prohibition of image-making (Bildverbot, as Kant calls it) which is, paradoxically, superceded by another moment, the prohibition of "bowing down and serving them" (i.e. The first main part consists of five Prolegomena, each of which can be read separately. "From : The dissertation is divided into two main parts: (1) "Problems With Metaphor? Prolegomena for Reading Otherwise", and (2) "Crossing the Troposphere: Paul Celan's Poetry and Poetics at the Limits of Figurality". ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |