Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Clark, Lorraine, Verfasser, author

Title Blake, Kierkegaard, and the spectre of dialectic / Lorraine Clark
Published Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1991
Online access available from:
Cambridge Core    View Resource Record  

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xii, 238 pages)
Summary Blake's late prophecies, The Four Zoas, Milton and Jerusalem, feature a conflict between the poet-prophet Los and a Spectre embodying all he most opposes: intellectual scepticism, religious despair and a systematic philosophical logic of contraries, which is for Blake an abstraction from, and negation of, his ideal of 'life'. In this 1991 book, Lorraine Clark traces the analogy between Blake's Spectre and Soren Kierkegaard's concept of 'dread', whose spirit of negation and irony he seeks to conquer, in both its philosophical and aesthetic manifestations. Using Kierkegaard's philosophy to illuminate Blake's prophecies, Lorraine Clark shows these concepts to offer the basis for a profound critique both of romanticism, as it has come to be identified with the spirit of dialectic, and of the postmodern irony which it has spawned. Their attempt to rescue an ideal of life from its abstraction within idealist dialectics is itself deeply romantic, and offers a dramatisation of tensions - between scepticism and affirmation, religion and nihilism, philosophy and poetry - central to our understanding of romanticism
Notes Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015)
Subject Kierkegaard, Søren, 1813-1855 -- Aesthetics.
Blake, William, 1757-1827 -- Philosophy.
Polarity (Philosophy) in literature.
Romanticism.
Dialectic.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780511597435
0511597436
9780521395090
0521395097
9780521110471
0521110475
Other Titles Blake, Kierkegaard, et the Spectre of Dialectic