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Negative Hermeneutics and the Question of Practice

Autor Professor Nicholas Davey
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 dec 2023
How do words and images function hermeneutically? How does hermeneutic practice work? Answering these questions and more, Nicholas Davey develops the hermeneutical foundations of creative practice. In doing so, he not only uncovers the significance of philosophical hermeneutics for the arts and the humanities, but defends the humanities as a whole from the current scepticism inspired by deconstruction and post-structuralism. Taking Gadamer's language ontology as its cue, this pioneering volume not only addresses certain weaknesses that Davey observes in Gadamer's thought but further takes Gadamerian thinking beyond Gadamer himself. In particular, Davey investigates the productive value of negativity that is central to hermeneutics and to wider spheres of creative learning. Advocating a renewed confidence in hermeneutics and the humanities, Negative Hermeneutics and the Question of Practice reveals how hermeneutical thinking provides a map of the dynamics within creative practice, eliminating the need for an externally imposed 'theory' of the arts.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350347656
ISBN-10: 1350347655
Pagini: 328
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.63 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Highlights and seeks to rectify the timely issue of the loss of confidence in the humanities, caused in part by destruction and post-structuralism

Notă biografică

Nicholas Davey is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Dundee, UK. His previous publications include Unquiet Understanding (2006) and Unfinished Worlds (2014).

Cuprins

Acknowledgements Introduction: A Question of Attunement Part One: Negative Perceptions 1.1 Falling into Question: Hermeneutics and the Humanities 1.2 Hermeneutics in Question1.3 Humanities in Question: Recalibrating the Question1.4 Entr' Acte No 1. Part Two: The Way of the Negative2.1 Introduction. Negation's Optimism2.2 Hermeneutic Negativity2.3 Deconstructive Negativity2.4 The Negativity of Experience2.5 Liminal Spaces2.6 The Fore-conception of Completeness2.7 Consider the Object2.8 Images and Concepts and Going to Completion2.9 The Anticipation of Completeness as a Driver of Practice2.10 Thoughts on the Future of Hermeneutics2.11. Entr'Acte No 2 Part Three: Hermeneutics: Towards A Poetics of Practice 3.0 Sprachlichkeit and Practice: Pre-figuring a Logic of Interaction 3.1 Introduction: The Forgotten Question of Practice3.2 Practical Steps3.3 Practice: A Historical Problematic: An Initial Orientation3.4 Differential Space3.5 Towards a Poetics of Hermeneutic Practice.3.6 Hermeneutical Poetics and "The Turning Word" Part Four: The Provocations of Practice Introduction4.1 Practice and the Instabilities of Understanding: Unattainable Completeness and Inevitable Failure4.2 Practice and Repetition4.3 Practice and Speculative Movement 4.4 The Negativity of Provocative Expectations 4.5 The Regulative Idea of Completion as a Mechanism of Hermeneutic Displacement4.6 Regulative and Constituitive Completion4.7 The Positivity of Negative Outcomes4.8 The Confidence of Practice4.9 Hermeneutic Defenestration4.10 The Provoked Self4.11 The Provocative Way of Hermeneutical Practice4.12 Vectoring the Immeasurable4.13 Reading as a Provocative Stratagem4.14 The Returns of Aesthetic Completeness 4.15 The Dialectic of Word and Concept4.16 Hermeneutical Openness as Praxis4.17 Seeing Understandingly4.18 Hermeneutical Praxis4.19 The Transcendental Conditions of Hermeneutical Praxis4.20 The Transcendental Basis of Negative Hermeneutics4.21 Of First and Last Things Bibliography Index