敞开的视界——跨学科与跨文化视野下的文学研究

敞开的视界——跨学科与跨文化视野下的文学研究

Author: 耿幼壮著

Publisher: BEIJING BOOK CO. INC.

Published: 2021-11-12

Total Pages: 393

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

本书试图以宽广的视野再度审视西方文学与文化之间的关系。作者相信,从奥古斯丁到阿冈本,西方文学和文学理论的发展始终与西方哲学、宗教和艺术传统的形成紧密相连,只能也必须从跨学科的角度来加以认识和探讨。不仅如此,从柏拉图到德里达,西方文化也总是在与作为他者的东方文化的相互影响和相互作用下而形成和发展的;对于前者,那是更为古老的埃及文化,对于后者,则是相对陌生的中国文化。因此,使我们的视界得以敞开的前提就是世界自身在向我们不断敞开。


Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches to Reasoning with Uncertainty

Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches to Reasoning with Uncertainty

Author: Sébastien Destercke

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-07-11

Total Pages: 551

ISBN-13: 3319208071

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 13th European Conference on Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches to Reasoning with Uncertainty, ECSQARU 2015, held in Compiègne, France, in July 2015. The 49 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 69 submissions and cover topics on decision theory and preferences; argumentation; conditionals; game theory; belief update; classification; inconsistency; graphical models; Bayesian networks; belief functions; logic; and probabilistic graphical models for scalable data analytics. Papers come from researchers interested in advancing the technology and from practitioners using uncertainty techniques in real-world applications. The scope of the ECSQARU conferences encompasses fundamental issues, representation, inference, learning, and decision making in qualitative and numeric uncertainty paradigms.


The End of the Poem

The End of the Poem

Author: Giorgio Agamben

Publisher: Stanford University Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 170

ISBN-13: 0804730229

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book, by one of Italy's most important and original contemporary philosophers, represents a broad, general, and ambitious undertaking--nothing less than an attempt to rethink the nature of poetic language and to rearticulate relationships among theology, poetry, and philosophy in a tradition of literature initiated by Dante. The author presents "literature" as a set of formal or linguistic genres that discuss or develop theological issues at a certain distance from the discourse of theology. This distance begins to appear in Virgil and Ovid, but it becomes decisive in Dante and in his decision to write in the vernacular. His vernacular Italian reaches back through classical allusion to the Latin that was in his day the language of theology, but it does so with a difference. It is no accident that in the Commedia Virgil is Dante's guide. The book opens with a discussion of just how Dante's poem is a "comedy," and it concludes with a discussion of the "ends of poetry" in a variety of senses: enjambment at the ends of lines, the concluding lines of poems, and the end of poetry as a mode of writing this sort of literature. Of course, to have poetry "end" does not mean that people stop writing it, but that literature passes into a period in which it is concerned with its own ending, with its own bounds and limits, historical and otherwise. Though most of the essays make specific reference to various authors of the Italian literary tradition (including Dante, Polifilo, Pascoli, Delfini, and Caproni), they transcend the confines of Italian literature and engage several other literary and philosophical authors (Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Boethius, the Provençal poets, Mallarmé, and Hölderlin, among others).


The Deed of Reading

The Deed of Reading

Author: Garrett Stewart

Publisher: Cornell University Press

Published: 2015-09-08

Total Pages: 267

ISBN-13: 1501701703

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Garrett Stewart begins The Deed of Reading with a memory of his first hesitant confrontation, as a teenager, with poetic density. In that early verbal challenge he finds one driving force of literature: to make language young again in its surprise, coming alive in each new event of reading. But what exactly happens in the textual encounter to make literary phrasing resonate so deeply with readers? To take the measure of literary writing, The Deed of Reading convenes diverse philosophic commentary on the linguistics of literature, with stress on the complementary work of Stanley Cavell and Giorgio Agamben. Sympathetic to recent ventures in form-attentive analysis but resisting an emphasis on so-called surface reading, Stewart explores not some new formalism but the internal pressures of language in formation, registering the verbal infrastructure of literary prose as well as verse. In this mode of "contextual" reading, the context is language itself. Literary phrasing, tapping the speech act’s own generative pulse, emerges as a latent philosophy of language in its own right, whereby human subjects, finding no secure place to situate themselves within language, settle for its taking place in, through, and between them. Stewart watches and hears this dynamics of wording played out in dozens of poems and novels over two centuries of English literary production—from Wordsworth and Shelley to Browning and Hopkins, from Poe and Dickens through George Eliot, Conrad, James, and on to Toni Morrison. The Deed of Reading offers a revisionary contribution to the ethic of verbal attention in the grip of "deep reading."