"<i>The Fate of the Self</i> is a daring and independent work—daring in the scope of its inclusions, independent in its attitude toward received ideas in literary theory. It brings intellectual history and literary criticism together, without slighting either."—Allan Megill, University of Virginia
"An impressive tour de force. . . . <i>The Fate of the Self</i> is precisely the kind of book one will want to read closely, learn from appreciatively, and engage in strenuous debate."—Dominick LaCapra, Cornell University
"The question of the self has not gone away, and Corngold is one of the first critics in the U. S. to have taken it up again in the wake of the poststructuralist polemical proclamation of the death of the subject."—Mihai I. Spariosu, University of Georgia
Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xxi
Abbreviations xxiii
Introduction 1
1. Holderin and the Question of the Self 21
2. Dilthey's Poetics of Force 55
3. Self and Subject in Nietzsche During the Axial Period 95
4. Mann as a Reader of Nietzsche 129
5. The Author Survives on the Margin of His Breaks: Kafka's Narrative Perspective 161
6. Freud as Literature? 181
7. Heidegger's Being and Time: Implications for Poetics 197
Postscript: On Rhetoric, Its Treachery, Confession, and the Desire for Wholeness 219
Notes 229
Index 271
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Stanley Corngold, Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures and Comparative Literature at Princeton University, is the author of several books, including Franz Kafka: The Necessity of Form.