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Romanticism, Literature and Philosophy: Expressive Rationality in Rousseau, Kant, Wollstonecraft and Contemporary Theory


Romanticism, Literature and Philosophy: Expressive Rationality in Rousseau, Kant, Wollstonecraft and Contemporary Theory

Hardback by Swift, Simon

Romanticism, Literature and Philosophy: Expressive Rationality in Rousseau, Kant, Wollstonecraft and Contemporary Theory

£150.00

ISBN:
9780826486448
Publication Date:
8 Jun 2006
Language:
English;English
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Pages:
192 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 14 - 19 May 2024
Romanticism, Literature and Philosophy: Expressive Rationality in Rousseau, Kant, Wollstonecraft and Contemporary Theory

Description

Romanticism, Literature and Philosophy proposes a radical revisioning of Romantic literature by developing a new insight into its philosophical importance. It challenges both a number of recent attacks on philosophical reason, and new historicist readings of Romanticism, by arguing that they fundamentally misinterpret what reason is in strikingly similar ways. Engaging with the philosophical, political and literary writings of Rousseau, Kant and Mark Wollstonecraft, and with the deconstruction of Paul de Man and Gayatri Spivak, it suggests that postmodernism's recent assault on Enlightement universalism, and on aesthetic autonomy, in the name of particularity and heterogeneity underestimates the capacity of reason to orient itself towards forms of anthropological and literary defence. Simon Swift is Lecturer in Critical and Culural Theory at the School of English, University of Leeds.

Contents

Introduction; Part I: Foregrounding Philosophical Anthropology; 1 Stating the Case: Rousseau, Kant, Wollstonecraft; 2 Reflective Judgement as Symbolic Cognition; Part II: Reason in Theory; 3 Kant, Herder, Gayatri Spivak and the Question of Philosophical Anthropology. 4 Paul de Man and the Rhetoric of Contemporary Criticism; 5 Mary Wollstonecraft and the 'Reserve of Reason'; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

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