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Kaja Silverman

Flesh of My Flesh

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What is a woman? What is a man? How do they—and how should they—relate to each other? Does our yearning for “wholeness” refer to something real, and if there is a Whole, what is it, and why do we feel so estranged from it? For centuries now, art and literature have increasingly valorized uniqueness and self-sufficiency. The theoreticians who loom so large within contemporary thought also privilege difference over similarity. Silverman reminds us that this is but half the story, and a dangerous half at that, for if we are all individuals, we are doomed to be rivals and enemies. A much older story, one that prevailed through the early modern era, held that likeness or resemblance was what organized the universe, and that everything emerges out of the same flesh. Silverman shows that analogy, so discredited by much of twentieth-century thought, offers a much more promising view of human relations. In the West, the emblematic story of turning away is that of Orpheus and Eurydice, and the heroes of Silverman's sweeping new reading of nineteenth— and twentieth-century culture, the modern heirs to the old, analogical view of the world, also gravitate to this myth. They embrace the correspondences that bind Orpheus to Eurydice and acknowledge their kinship with others past and present. The first half of this book assembles a cast of characters not usually brought together: Friedrich Nietzsche, Sigmund Freud, Marcel Proust, Lou-Andréas Salomé, Romain Rolland, Rainer Maria Rilke, Wilhelm Jensen, and Paula Modersohn-Becker. The second half is devoted to three contemporary artists, whose works we see in a moving new light:Terrence Malick, James Coleman, and Gerhard Richter.
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514 паперових сторінок
Дата публікації оригіналу
2009
Рік виходу видання
2009
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  • Polina Akhmetzyanovaцитує6 років тому
    He is reluctant to acknowledge this because nirvana is another name for “oceanic feeling.”
  • Polina Akhmetzyanovaцитує6 років тому
    The narcissist seeks to include everything (good) within himself. Grabbe consoles his hero by reminding him that the opposite is true: the world contains us. The quotation from Hannibal also defies the other use to which Freud puts it. If we do not leave the world when we die, then it is all that we can ever experience; the oceanic feeling must consequently be something we access through our finitude.
  • Polina Akhmetzyanovaцитує6 років тому
    In a passage early in Civilization and Its Discontents, he also treats the oceanic feeling as a manifestation of infantile narcissism, saying that it is based on a Christian notion of eternity: “If I have understood [Rolland] rightly, he means the same thing by [the oceanic feeling] as the consolation offered by an original and somewhat eccentric dramatist to his hero when facing a self-inflicted death. ‘We cannot fall out of this world.’ That is to say, a feeling of an indissoluble bond, of being one with the external world as a whole” (65).
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