buchspektrum Internet-Buchhandlung

Neuerscheinungen 2015

Stand: 2020-02-01
Schnellsuche
ISBN/Stichwort/Autor
Herderstraße 10
10625 Berlin
Tel.: 030 315 714 16
Fax 030 315 714 14
info@buchspektrum.de

John Gibson

The Philosophy of Poetry


Herausgegeben von Gibson, John
2015. 264 S. 227 mm
Verlag/Jahr: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS; OUP OXFORD 2015
ISBN: 0-19-960367-7 (0199603677)
Neue ISBN: 978-0-19-960367-1 (9780199603671)

Preis und Lieferzeit: Bitte klicken


The Philosophy of Poetry brings together philosophers of art, language, and mind to expose and address the array of problems poetry raises for philosophy. This volume offers a powerful demonstration of how central poetry should be to philosophy, and sets out the various puzzles and paradoxes that future work in the field will have to address.
In recent years philosophers have produced important books on nearly all the major arts: the novel and painting, music and theatre, dance and architecture, conceptual art and even gardening. Poetry is the sole exception. This is an astonishing omission, one this collection of original essays will correct. If contemporary philosophy still regards metaphors such as ´Juliet is the sun´ as a serious problem, one has an acute sense of how prepared it is to make
philosophical and aesthetic sense of poems such W. B. Yeats´s ´The Second Coming´, Sylvia Plath´s ´Daddy´, or Paul Celan´s ´Todesfuge´. The Philosophy of Poetry brings together philosophers of art, language, and mind to expose and address the array of problems poetry raises for philosophy. In doing so it lays
the foundation for a proper philosophy of poetry, setting out the various puzzles and paradoxes that future work in the field will have to address. Given its breadth of approach, the volume is relevant not only to aesthetics but to all areas of philosophy concerned with meaning, truth, and the communicative and expressive powers of language more generally. Poetry is the last unexplored frontier in contemporary analytic aesthetics, and this volume offers a powerful demonstration of how central
poetry should be to philosophy.
Overall ... this is an important and well-edited volume that exhibits a wide variety of topics, styles, and approaches. M.W. Rowe, Australasian Journal of Philosophy
John Gibson is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Louisville. His research focuses on topics in the philosophy of literature and aesthetics. He is the author of Fiction and the Weave of Life (OUP, 2007) and coeditor of Narrative, Emotion and Insight (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2011), The Literary Wittgenstein (Routledge, 2004), A Sense of The World: Essays on Fiction, Narrative, and Knowledge
(Routledge, 2007), and the forthcoming The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Literature. He is currently working on a manuscript titled Poetry, Metaphor, and Nonsense: An Essay on Meaning.