Schiller to Derrida
Schiller to Derrida is a historical critique of literary theory in the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Starting with the work of Kant and Schiller, it traces an idealist tradition through nineteenth-century Romantic theory (including Wordsworth and Coleridge) and the New Critics to post-structuralists, notably Derrida. The book argues that these diverse and often apparently radical critics in fact only revise and distort Kant's idealist aesthetics. It shows how this dominant idealism has prejudiced critical opinion against certain non-idealist writers, and takes the example of John Clare as illustration.
Reviews & endorsements
Review of the hardback: 'An outstandingly good piece of work: theoretically sophisticated, excellently knowledgeable about German philosophy and aesthetics, and really quite bold and challenging in its querying of a whole range of orthodox Romantic critical assumptions.' Terry Eagleton, Linacre College, Oxford
Product details
April 2010Paperback
9780521131643
264 pages
216 × 140 × 15 mm
0.34kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Schiller and the sentimental tradition
- 2. Myths of romanticism
- 3. Critics of Clare and Wordsworth
- 4. Ut pictura poesis
- 5. Post-Kantians and post-structuralists
- 6. The peasant poet
- Notes
- Bibliography.