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  • Title: Understanding Our Selves

    Understanding Our Selves

    The Dangerous Art of Biography
    by Susan Tridgell (Author) 2011
    ©2004 Monographs
  • Title: Discourse Formation in Comparative Education

    Discourse Formation in Comparative Education

    by Jürgen Schriewer (Volume editor) Jürgen K. Schriewer (Volume editor) 2000
    ©2012 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Rise and Fall of Modern Man

    The Rise and Fall of Modern Man

    by Jacek Dobrowolski (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Monographs
  • Title: Demonic Possession, Vulnerability, and Performance in Medieval French Drama

    Demonic Possession, Vulnerability, and Performance in Medieval French Drama

    by Andreea Marculescu (Author) 2018
    ©2018 Monographs
  • Title: I Never Wanted to Be a Stereotype

    I Never Wanted to Be a Stereotype

    A Sociologist’s Narrative of Healing
    by Cindy Brooks Dollar (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Monographs
  • Title: The University and the State

    The University and the State

    A Study into Global Transformations
    by Marek Kwiek (Author)
    ©2006 Monographs
  • Title: Memory and Identity in the Medieval and Early Modern World

    Memory and Identity in the Medieval and Early Modern World

    by Roman Bleier (Volume editor) Brian Coleman (Volume editor) Clare Fletcher (Volume editor) 2022
    ©2022 Edited Collection
  • Title: Notes from the Diaspora

    Notes from the Diaspora

    by Marlon Simmons (Author) 2022
    ©2022 Textbook
  • Contemporary Critical Concepts and Pre-Enlightenment Literature

    ISSN: 1074-6781

    "Writers who worked before the beginning of rationalist universalism's triumphal period which may be ending now-explored issues of consciousness, ideology, and culture that recent criticism and critical theory, using various specialized vocabularies of concepts, have returned to the center of literäry and social criticism. These early modern figures often anticipated some of our clilemmas; How to manipulate an apparently quite mutable world and, at the same time, preserve belief in an immutable "centered" self? How to reconcile rationalist universalism with personal and cultural stability? Rene Descartes's postulate of man as the master and proprietor of an increasingly built world is fundamentally incompatible with his effort to underwrite man as a stable philosophical subject. Man's technical and linguistic mastery devours his "transcendent subjectivity." Students of literature are now using the ideas of what Larry Riggs calls "post-enlightenment thinkers"-Max Horkheimer, Jacques Lacan, Michael Foucault, Rene Girard, and others-to elucidate the implicit and explicit debates about rationalism that are embedded in literary works. This trend is most usefully seen as a renewal of contact with preoccupations that were quite current in medieval, Renaissance, and seventeenth-century European literature. To date, however, innovative criticism has focused an more recent literature. Some post-structuralists-most notably Jacques Lacan-have tried their hand at interpreting early works. Their ideas are interesting, but their knowledge of the periods in question is often weak. Manuscripts on Elizabethan and Restoration theater, French, Italian, and German writers of the medieval and Renaissance periods, and die seventeenth-century French dramatists and moralists are welcome. "

    3 publications

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