Language:
English
繁體中文
Help
回圖書館首頁
手機版館藏查詢
Login
Back
Switch To:
Labeled
|
MARC Mode
|
ISBD
Moving bodies poetic theatricality i...
~
Taylor, Michael Thomas.
Linked to FindBook
Google Book
Amazon
博客來
Moving bodies poetic theatricality in the late Enlightenment .
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Moving bodies poetic theatricality in the late Enlightenment ./
Author:
Taylor, Michael Thomas.
Description:
276 p.
Notes:
Adviser: Barbara Hahn.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International68-03A.
Subject:
Literature, Germanic. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3255848
Moving bodies poetic theatricality in the late Enlightenment .
Taylor, Michael Thomas.
Moving bodies poetic theatricality in the late Enlightenment .
- 276 p.
Adviser: Barbara Hahn.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Princeton University, 2007.
Ideals of authentic, autonomous selfhood are central to the Enlightenment. This dissertation argues that these ideals give rise to paradoxical structures of theatricality, in which the body becomes most meaningful as a sign for the inner truth of the soul when it silences the subject's voice. The body stages a performative immediacy but thereby also acquires a significance that this dissertation elucidates as poetic. The term "poetic" refers to literary practices from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Germany and France that reflect upon the limits of embodied subjectivity, on speech as a medium for subjective action and expression, and on forms of community such as the public sphere or the body politic without which the self would be a solipsistic monad. The dissertation therefore aims to understand why this theatricality produces a tension between the voice and the body and what it means that this tension resolves in poetic language.Subjects--Topical Terms:
1019072
Literature, Germanic.
Moving bodies poetic theatricality in the late Enlightenment .
LDR
:03132nam 2200289 a 45
001
948040
005
20110524
008
110524s2007 ||||||||||||||||| ||eng d
035
$a
(UMI)AAI3255848
035
$a
AAI3255848
040
$a
UMI
$c
UMI
100
1
$a
Taylor, Michael Thomas.
$3
1271501
245
1 0
$a
Moving bodies poetic theatricality in the late Enlightenment .
300
$a
276 p.
500
$a
Adviser: Barbara Hahn.
500
$a
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 68-03, Section: A, page: 1006.
502
$a
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Princeton University, 2007.
520
$a
Ideals of authentic, autonomous selfhood are central to the Enlightenment. This dissertation argues that these ideals give rise to paradoxical structures of theatricality, in which the body becomes most meaningful as a sign for the inner truth of the soul when it silences the subject's voice. The body stages a performative immediacy but thereby also acquires a significance that this dissertation elucidates as poetic. The term "poetic" refers to literary practices from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Germany and France that reflect upon the limits of embodied subjectivity, on speech as a medium for subjective action and expression, and on forms of community such as the public sphere or the body politic without which the self would be a solipsistic monad. The dissertation therefore aims to understand why this theatricality produces a tension between the voice and the body and what it means that this tension resolves in poetic language.
520
$a
Analyzing the philosophical tradition of mind from Descartes to Leibniz, Rousseau, and Kant, the dissertation first shows how the inner activity of thinking gives rise to a paradoxical theatricality that invests the body with poetic significance and thereby interrogates the conditions of possibility of communicating sentiments. With Kant, the ideal of a sensus communis culminates in the claim that complete communication can occur only in meaning that is poetic because it is devoid of determinate content. Reading works by Lessing, Klopstock, Hamann, and J.J. Engel, the dissertation then examines literary, hermeneutic, and theatrical practices that explore the power of the body to function as a natural sign of the soul and broach the possibility that language itself might manifest powers of gesture and movement. In these practices, poetic language founds concrete forms of community, but the limits of these communities uncover a tragic structure in which a subject is caught between the apparent immediacy of its body and the need to express itself in language. Finally, in a reading of Georg Buchner's historical drama Dantons Tod, the dissertation argues that this play's intertextuality confronts this tragic structure with a poetic freedom that arises only in challenging its own possibility.
590
$a
School code: 0181.
650
4
$a
Literature, Germanic.
$3
1019072
650
4
$a
Philosophy.
$3
516511
650
4
$a
Theater.
$3
522973
690
$a
0311
690
$a
0422
690
$a
0465
710
2
$a
Princeton University.
$3
645579
773
0
$t
Dissertation Abstracts International
$g
68-03A.
790
$a
0181
790
1 0
$a
Hahn, Barbara,
$e
advisor
791
$a
Ph.D.
792
$a
2007
856
4 0
$u
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3255848
based on 0 review(s)
Location:
ALL
電子資源
Year:
Volume Number:
Items
1 records • Pages 1 •
1
Inventory Number
Location Name
Item Class
Material type
Call number
Usage Class
Loan Status
No. of reservations
Opac note
Attachments
W9115767
電子資源
11.線上閱覽_V
電子書
EB W9115767
一般使用(Normal)
On shelf
0
1 records • Pages 1 •
1
Multimedia
Reviews
Add a review
and share your thoughts with other readers
Export
pickup library
Processing
...
Change password
Login