The Literary WittgensteinJohn Gibson, Wolfgang Huemer Psychology Press, 2004 - 356 pages The Literary Wittgenstein is a stellar collection of articles relating the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) to core problems in the theory and philosophy of literature. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 47
... experiences of reading . His Wittgenstein and the Grammar of Literary Experience appeared in 1993. He is retired and lives in Leverett , Massachusetts . Garry L. Hagberg is the James H. Ottaway , Jr. viii Notes on contributors.
... live in - something which it can do only because literary texts do not use language in some aberrant way ; rather they use ordinary language towards which literature also draws our attention . Literature , thus , is not a niche ...
... live and dead signs as well as his remarks on aspect seeing account for how we can grasp the content of a poem . Poetry is a language game governed by its own conventions ; its goal is not ( primarily ) to convey information . Rather ...
... live up to his expecta- tions . In the preface to the Tractatus he notes : " If this work has any value , it consists in two things : the first is that thoughts are expressed in it , and on this score the better the thoughts are ...
... live for me as if for the first time . Suppose it were true , as Wittgenstein early and late has been taken to assert , that the problems of philosophy arise from a misunderstanding of our language . What could be a more intimate study ...
Contents
The Investigations everyday aesthetics of itself | 21 |
But isnt the same at least the same? Wittgenstein and the question of poetic translatability | 34 |
Wittgensteins imperfect garden the ladders and labyrinths of philosophy as Dichtung | 55 |
Restlessness and the achievement of peace writing and method in Wittgensteins Philosophical Investigations | 75 |
Imagined worlds and the real one Plato Wittgenstein and mimesis | 92 |
Reading for life | 109 |
Reading with Wittgenstein | 125 |
Introduction to Having a rough story about what moral philosophy is | 127 |
Literature and the boundaries of self and sense | 209 |
Rotating the axis of our investigation Wittgensteins investigations and Holderlins poetology | 211 |
Autobiographical consciousness Wittgenstein private experience and the inner picture | 228 |
Monologic and dialogic Wittgenstein Heart of Darkness and linguistic skepticism | 251 |
Wittgenstein and Faulkners Benjy reflections on and of derangement | 267 |
Fiction and the Tractatus | 289 |
Facts and fiction reflections on the Tractatus | 291 |
Wittgensteins Tractatus and the logic of fiction | 305 |
Having a rough story about what moral philosophy is | 133 |
The life of the sign Wittgenstein on reading a poem | 146 |
Wittgenstein against interpretation the meaning of a text does not stop short of its facts | 165 |
On the old saw every reading of a text is an interpretation some remarks | 186 |