Loading...

Kierkegaard and the Dialectics of Modernism

by Jorgen Veisland (Author)
©1986 Others 258 Pages
Series: American University Studies , Volume 19

Summary

Kierkegaard and the Dialectics of Modernism defines literary Modernism (represented by seven English, American, and Scandinavian authors) as not only a manifestation of man's separation and alienation from himself and society, but also as an expression of man's struggle towards integration and liberation. In the texts, this dialectic is reflected in the ironic interplay between the fragmentation of language and the poetic longing for wholeness. Kierkegaard's philosophy and Freud's psychology express a conflict comparable to the Modernist dilemma. The areas of philosophy, psychology, and literature, when examined dialectically, reveal a common response, in different terms, to a shared historical situation.

Details

Pages
258
Year
1986
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820402512
Language
English
Published
New York, Bern, Frankfurt/M., 1985. 258 pp.

Biographical notes

Jorgen Veisland (Author)

Previous

Title: Kierkegaard and the Dialectics of Modernism