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Reading Hegel: Irony, Recollection, Critique: Thinking Literature

Autor Dr. Robert Lucas Scott
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 mar 2025
Retrieves Hegelian speculative experience for literary theory.

The relationship between Hegel and literary theory has for a long time been both contested and paradoxical. On the one hand, “theory” is often skeptical of all that Hegel ostensibly stood for: idealism, systematicity, and identity at the expense of difference. Yet, in spite of itself, literary theory is taken to owe a profound debt to Hegel’s philosophy. Robert Lucas Scott’s book complicates this account and argues that literary theory has made the mistake of abstracting Hegel’s thought from its more dynamic presentation in Hegel’s writings, reducing “Hegel” to a series of propositions or positions. Literary theory, Scott argues, misses what is perhaps the greatest innovation of Hegel’s philosophy: a presentation of experience that begins precisely by setting aside all preconceptions or prior assumptions. It is on this point that Hegel’s philosophy itself approaches literature: its content cannot be simply abstracted from the singular experience of reading it. Only through a mode of reading alive to speculative experience can literary theory become truly Hegelian. Scott’s exposition of Hegel offers a model of reading with relevance beyond philosophy: one that is critical without pretensions of mastery and detachment and that honors the singularity of the reading experience without succumbing to the subjectivism of the “postcritical.”

The book also includes engagements with the work of Luther, Kant, Marx, Gillian Rose, Fredric Jameson, Robert Brandom, Catherine Malabou, and more in its recovery of Hegel’s thought for a critical understanding of our time.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226838090
ISBN-10: 0226838099
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Seria Thinking Literature


Notă biografică

Robert Lucas Scott is an arts research fellow at Jesus College, University of Cambridge. He is coeditor of Gillian Rose’s lectures, Marxist Modernism: Introductory Lectures on Frankfurt School Critical Theory.

Cuprins

Preface: Theses on Reading Hegel

Introduction: What Is Living-Dead in the Philosophy of Hegel?
Everyone Has Become a Hegelian
How to Read Hegel
Critique beyond the Limits of Critique, Marx beyond the Limits of Hegel

Part 1: Reading Hegel
Chapter 1: Irony, or What Is
“With What Must the Beginning of Science Be Made?”
Hegel’s Phenomenological Method
The “Is”
Woman: The Eternal Irony of the Community?
From the Speculative Reading of the Proposition to the Speculative Reading of the Phenomenology
Commitment Issues
Chapter 2: Recollection, or The Gallery of Images
The Phenomenology as a Gallery of Images
The Fate of Representation
Er-Innerung
Some Examples
Marx’s Imagery: Difficult to Swallow
Grey in Grey; Remembering and Repeating
Suspicion or Trust?
Chapter 3: The Spirit and the Letter, or A Series of Letters concerning the Spirit and the Letter within Hegel’s Philosophy
Letters against Letter-Bound Thinking
God Is Coal
Hegel and Luther

Part 2: Hegel Reading
Chapter 4: Après la Lettre: Hegel in a Postcritical Era
Hegel Contra Sociology
Hegel Contra Literary Theory
Theory after Kritik?
The Limits of Recognition
Jameson’s Hegelianism?
Speculative Reading and the Critique of Political Economy
The Remains of the Day
Hegel’s Defense of Poetry
Knausgaard’s Struggle

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Recenzii

“Scott offers a brilliant series of readings that do not merely elucidate the irony of truth but also extend an urgent reminder of the critical role that reading can play in an era where, ironically, ‘postcritical’ appeals to experiential immediacy have risen against the backdrop of unprecedented technological mediation. Elaborating pivotal moments in the oeuvres of Hegel and his readers—both at the level of conceptual formations as well as specific formulations; or, at the level of the ‘spirit’ and the ‘letter’—Scott exposes the far-reaching implications of Hegelian thought for the practice of theory today.”

“An impressive, original, and exhilarating exploration of Hegel’s theory and practice of speculative reading (and writing) that demonstrates the profound importance of dialectical thinking for contemporary literary theory. Offering a fine-grained reading of some of the most difficult passages of Hegel’s philosophy, Scott makes a compelling argument for the centrality of what he calls ‘speculative experience’—specifically, the experience of speculative reading as a repetitive, retroactively self-correcting, self-defamiliarizing, self-undermining, and self-surprising procedure. We need to learn again how to read. This book shows us how.”

“Scott foregrounds the experiential character of Hegelian thinking and reminds us that on the Hegelian path nothing may be presupposed or taken away. In this sense, reading Hegel is like reading literary texts. Those for whom that is too inconsequential may turn to Scott’s argument that Hegel’s philosophy yields caricatures, which can function as seeds for further growth and harvest. The ironic twists abound in this sophisticated defense of the experience of reading.”