Title
Holderlin And Blanchot On SelfSacrifice (Currents in Comparative Romance Languages and Literatures),Used
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A scene of selfsacrifice can never be staged or secured. The work of Friedrich Hlderlin, arguably one of the most profound writers of the German Enlightenment, supports this idea in fascinating ways. Much of Hlderlins critical reception, however, has the poet saying the exact opposite. Joseph Suglia counters the dominant critical reception of Hlderlins Empedokles fragments, which would transform the tragic heros experience of mortality into a project that would be accomplished in the name of the transcendent reconciliation of disparate spheres.This book also focuses on a densely detailed consideration of the work of the great French critic and literary artist, Maurice Blanchot, whose own treatment of selfsacrifice exists in closer proximity to Hlderlins than the former appears to recognize. For Blanchot, it is argued, selfsacrifice is a sacrifice that is an engagement with, in, and for language, a sacrifice that is both madness and mystery.
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