Katalin Nun, Jon Stewart
Volume 16, Tome II
Kierkegaard's Literary Figures and Motifs: Gulliver to Zerlina
Katalin Nun, Jon Stewart
Volume 16, Tome II
Kierkegaard's Literary Figures and Motifs: Gulliver to Zerlina
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While Kierkegaard is perhaps known best as a religious thinker and philosopher, there is an unmistakable literary element in his writings. He often explains complex concepts and ideas by using literary figures and motifs that he could assume his readers would have some familiarity with. This dimension of his thought has served to make his writings
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While Kierkegaard is perhaps known best as a religious thinker and philosopher, there is an unmistakable literary element in his writings. He often explains complex concepts and ideas by using literary figures and motifs that he could assume his readers would have some familiarity with. This dimension of his thought has served to make his writings
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 417g
- ISBN-13: 9781032098845
- ISBN-10: 1032098848
- Artikelnr.: 62150012
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 417g
- ISBN-13: 9781032098845
- ISBN-10: 1032098848
- Artikelnr.: 62150012
Katalin Nun and Jon Stewart are both based in the Kierkegaard Research Centre at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Contents: Gulliver: Kierkegaard's reading of Swift and Gulliver's Travels
Frederico Pedreira; Hamlet: the impossibility of tragedy/the tragedy of impossibility
Leonardo F. Lisi; Holger the Dane: Kierkegaard's mention of one heroic legend
Robert B. Puchniak; Jeppe of the Hill: the hedonistic Christian
Julie K. Allen; Niels Klim: project makers in a world upside down
Elisabete M. de Sousa; King Lear: silence and the leafage of language
Nicholas John Chambers; Loki: romanticism and Kierkegaard's critique of the aesthetic
Matthew Brake; Lucinde: 'To live poetically is to live infinitely
' or Kierkegaard's concept of irony as portrayed in his analysis of Friedrich Schlegel's work
Fernando Manuel Ferreira da Silva; Lady Macbeth: the viscera of conscience
Malgorzata Grzegorzewska; Margarete: the feminine face of Faust
Antonella Fimiani; The master-thief: a one-man army against the established order
F. Nassim Bravo Jordan; Mephistopheles: demonic seducer
musician
philosopher
and humorist
Will Williams; Minerva: Kierkegaard's use of a Greek motif
Anne Louise Nielsen; Münchhausen: charlatan or sublime artist
Anders Rendtorff Klitgaard; Nemesis: from the ancient goddess to a modern concept
Laura Liva; Nero: insatiable sensualist
Sean Anthony Turchin; Papageno: an aesthetic awakening of the ethics of desire
Karen Hiles and Marcia Morgan; Per Degn: towards Kierkegaard's genealogy of the morals of the servitors of the state church
Gabriel Guedes Rossatti; Prometheus: thief
creator and icon of pain
Markus Pohlmeyer; Richard III: the prototype of the demonic
Nataliya Vorobyova Jørgensen; Robert le Diable: a modern tragic figure
Telmo Rodrigues; Typhon: the monster in Kierkegaard's mirror
David D. Possen; The wandering Jew: Kierkegaard and the figuration of death in life
Joseph Ballan; Xerxes: Kierkegaard's king of jest
Ana Pinto Leite; Zerlina: a study on how to overcome anxiety
Sara Ellen Eckerson; Indexes.
Frederico Pedreira; Hamlet: the impossibility of tragedy/the tragedy of impossibility
Leonardo F. Lisi; Holger the Dane: Kierkegaard's mention of one heroic legend
Robert B. Puchniak; Jeppe of the Hill: the hedonistic Christian
Julie K. Allen; Niels Klim: project makers in a world upside down
Elisabete M. de Sousa; King Lear: silence and the leafage of language
Nicholas John Chambers; Loki: romanticism and Kierkegaard's critique of the aesthetic
Matthew Brake; Lucinde: 'To live poetically is to live infinitely
' or Kierkegaard's concept of irony as portrayed in his analysis of Friedrich Schlegel's work
Fernando Manuel Ferreira da Silva; Lady Macbeth: the viscera of conscience
Malgorzata Grzegorzewska; Margarete: the feminine face of Faust
Antonella Fimiani; The master-thief: a one-man army against the established order
F. Nassim Bravo Jordan; Mephistopheles: demonic seducer
musician
philosopher
and humorist
Will Williams; Minerva: Kierkegaard's use of a Greek motif
Anne Louise Nielsen; Münchhausen: charlatan or sublime artist
Anders Rendtorff Klitgaard; Nemesis: from the ancient goddess to a modern concept
Laura Liva; Nero: insatiable sensualist
Sean Anthony Turchin; Papageno: an aesthetic awakening of the ethics of desire
Karen Hiles and Marcia Morgan; Per Degn: towards Kierkegaard's genealogy of the morals of the servitors of the state church
Gabriel Guedes Rossatti; Prometheus: thief
creator and icon of pain
Markus Pohlmeyer; Richard III: the prototype of the demonic
Nataliya Vorobyova Jørgensen; Robert le Diable: a modern tragic figure
Telmo Rodrigues; Typhon: the monster in Kierkegaard's mirror
David D. Possen; The wandering Jew: Kierkegaard and the figuration of death in life
Joseph Ballan; Xerxes: Kierkegaard's king of jest
Ana Pinto Leite; Zerlina: a study on how to overcome anxiety
Sara Ellen Eckerson; Indexes.
Contents: Gulliver: Kierkegaard's reading of Swift and Gulliver's Travels
Frederico Pedreira; Hamlet: the impossibility of tragedy/the tragedy of impossibility
Leonardo F. Lisi; Holger the Dane: Kierkegaard's mention of one heroic legend
Robert B. Puchniak; Jeppe of the Hill: the hedonistic Christian
Julie K. Allen; Niels Klim: project makers in a world upside down
Elisabete M. de Sousa; King Lear: silence and the leafage of language
Nicholas John Chambers; Loki: romanticism and Kierkegaard's critique of the aesthetic
Matthew Brake; Lucinde: 'To live poetically is to live infinitely
' or Kierkegaard's concept of irony as portrayed in his analysis of Friedrich Schlegel's work
Fernando Manuel Ferreira da Silva; Lady Macbeth: the viscera of conscience
Malgorzata Grzegorzewska; Margarete: the feminine face of Faust
Antonella Fimiani; The master-thief: a one-man army against the established order
F. Nassim Bravo Jordan; Mephistopheles: demonic seducer
musician
philosopher
and humorist
Will Williams; Minerva: Kierkegaard's use of a Greek motif
Anne Louise Nielsen; Münchhausen: charlatan or sublime artist
Anders Rendtorff Klitgaard; Nemesis: from the ancient goddess to a modern concept
Laura Liva; Nero: insatiable sensualist
Sean Anthony Turchin; Papageno: an aesthetic awakening of the ethics of desire
Karen Hiles and Marcia Morgan; Per Degn: towards Kierkegaard's genealogy of the morals of the servitors of the state church
Gabriel Guedes Rossatti; Prometheus: thief
creator and icon of pain
Markus Pohlmeyer; Richard III: the prototype of the demonic
Nataliya Vorobyova Jørgensen; Robert le Diable: a modern tragic figure
Telmo Rodrigues; Typhon: the monster in Kierkegaard's mirror
David D. Possen; The wandering Jew: Kierkegaard and the figuration of death in life
Joseph Ballan; Xerxes: Kierkegaard's king of jest
Ana Pinto Leite; Zerlina: a study on how to overcome anxiety
Sara Ellen Eckerson; Indexes.
Frederico Pedreira; Hamlet: the impossibility of tragedy/the tragedy of impossibility
Leonardo F. Lisi; Holger the Dane: Kierkegaard's mention of one heroic legend
Robert B. Puchniak; Jeppe of the Hill: the hedonistic Christian
Julie K. Allen; Niels Klim: project makers in a world upside down
Elisabete M. de Sousa; King Lear: silence and the leafage of language
Nicholas John Chambers; Loki: romanticism and Kierkegaard's critique of the aesthetic
Matthew Brake; Lucinde: 'To live poetically is to live infinitely
' or Kierkegaard's concept of irony as portrayed in his analysis of Friedrich Schlegel's work
Fernando Manuel Ferreira da Silva; Lady Macbeth: the viscera of conscience
Malgorzata Grzegorzewska; Margarete: the feminine face of Faust
Antonella Fimiani; The master-thief: a one-man army against the established order
F. Nassim Bravo Jordan; Mephistopheles: demonic seducer
musician
philosopher
and humorist
Will Williams; Minerva: Kierkegaard's use of a Greek motif
Anne Louise Nielsen; Münchhausen: charlatan or sublime artist
Anders Rendtorff Klitgaard; Nemesis: from the ancient goddess to a modern concept
Laura Liva; Nero: insatiable sensualist
Sean Anthony Turchin; Papageno: an aesthetic awakening of the ethics of desire
Karen Hiles and Marcia Morgan; Per Degn: towards Kierkegaard's genealogy of the morals of the servitors of the state church
Gabriel Guedes Rossatti; Prometheus: thief
creator and icon of pain
Markus Pohlmeyer; Richard III: the prototype of the demonic
Nataliya Vorobyova Jørgensen; Robert le Diable: a modern tragic figure
Telmo Rodrigues; Typhon: the monster in Kierkegaard's mirror
David D. Possen; The wandering Jew: Kierkegaard and the figuration of death in life
Joseph Ballan; Xerxes: Kierkegaard's king of jest
Ana Pinto Leite; Zerlina: a study on how to overcome anxiety
Sara Ellen Eckerson; Indexes.