Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Dekorationsartikel gehören nicht zum Leistungsumfang.
Hölderlin's Hymn the Ister
Buch von Martin Heidegger
Sprache: Englisch

45,60 €*

inkl. MwSt.

Versandkostenfrei per Post / DHL

Lieferzeit 1-2 Wochen

Kategorien:
Beschreibung

Translators' Foreword

Part One: Poetizing the Essence of the Rivers The Isther Hymn

1. The theme of the lecture course: remarks on Holderlin's hymnal poetry

2. Hymnal poetry as poetizing the essence of the rivers

Review

3. The metaphysical interpretation of art

4. Holderlin's poetry as not concerned with images in a symbolic or metaphysical sense. The concealed essence of the river

5. The river as the locality of human abode

Review

6. The rivers as "vanishing" and "full of intimation" in "voice of the People"

Review

7. The river as the locality of journeying and the journeying of locality

8. The questionableness of the metaphysical representation of space and time

9. Becoming homely as the care of Holderlin's poetry¿the encounter between the foreign and one's own as the fundamental truth of history¿Holderlin's dialogue with Pindar and Sophocles

Part Two: The Greek Interpretation of Human Beings in Sophocles' Antigone

10. The human being: the uncanniest of the uncanny. (The entry song of the chorus of elders and the first stationary song)

Review

11. The poetic dialogue between Holderlin and Sophocles

12. The meaning of (Explication of the commencement of the choral ode)

Review

13. The uncanny as the ground of human beings. (Continued explication of

Review

14. Further essential determinations of the human being

Review

15. Continued explication of the essence of the

16. The expulsion of the human being as the most uncanny being. (The relation of the closing words to the introductory words of the choral song)

Review

17. The introductory dialogue between Antigone and Ismene

18. The hearth as being. (Renewed meditation on the commencement of the choral ode and on the closing words)

Review

19. Continued discussion of the hearth as being

20. Becoming homely in being unhomely¿the ambiguity of being unhomely. The truth of the choral ode as the innermost middle of the tragedy.

Part Three: Holderlin's Poetizing of the Essence of The Poet as Demigod

21. Holderlin's river poetry and the choral ode from Sophocles¿a historical becoming homely in each case

22. The historically grounding spirit. Explication of the lines: "namely at home is spirit not at the commencement, not at the source. The home consumes it. Colony, and bold forgetting spirit loves. Our flowers and the shades of our woods gladden the one who languishes. The besouler would almost be scorched"

23. Poetizing the essence of poetry¿the poetic spirit as the spirit of the river. The holy as that which is to be poetized

24. The rivers as the poets who found the poetic, upon whose ground human beings dwell

25. The poet as the enigmatic "sign" who lets appear that which is to be shown. The holy as the fire that ignites the poet. The meaning of naming the gods.

26. Poetizing founding builds the stairs upon which the heavenly descend

Concluding Remark¿"Is There a Measure on Earth?

Editor's Epilogue

Translators' Notes

Glossary

English-German

German-English

Translators' Foreword

Part One: Poetizing the Essence of the Rivers The Isther Hymn

1. The theme of the lecture course: remarks on Holderlin's hymnal poetry

2. Hymnal poetry as poetizing the essence of the rivers

Review

3. The metaphysical interpretation of art

4. Holderlin's poetry as not concerned with images in a symbolic or metaphysical sense. The concealed essence of the river

5. The river as the locality of human abode

Review

6. The rivers as "vanishing" and "full of intimation" in "voice of the People"

Review

7. The river as the locality of journeying and the journeying of locality

8. The questionableness of the metaphysical representation of space and time

9. Becoming homely as the care of Holderlin's poetry¿the encounter between the foreign and one's own as the fundamental truth of history¿Holderlin's dialogue with Pindar and Sophocles

Part Two: The Greek Interpretation of Human Beings in Sophocles' Antigone

10. The human being: the uncanniest of the uncanny. (The entry song of the chorus of elders and the first stationary song)

Review

11. The poetic dialogue between Holderlin and Sophocles

12. The meaning of (Explication of the commencement of the choral ode)

Review

13. The uncanny as the ground of human beings. (Continued explication of

Review

14. Further essential determinations of the human being

Review

15. Continued explication of the essence of the

16. The expulsion of the human being as the most uncanny being. (The relation of the closing words to the introductory words of the choral song)

Review

17. The introductory dialogue between Antigone and Ismene

18. The hearth as being. (Renewed meditation on the commencement of the choral ode and on the closing words)

Review

19. Continued discussion of the hearth as being

20. Becoming homely in being unhomely¿the ambiguity of being unhomely. The truth of the choral ode as the innermost middle of the tragedy.

Part Three: Holderlin's Poetizing of the Essence of The Poet as Demigod

21. Holderlin's river poetry and the choral ode from Sophocles¿a historical becoming homely in each case

22. The historically grounding spirit. Explication of the lines: "namely at home is spirit not at the commencement, not at the source. The home consumes it. Colony, and bold forgetting spirit loves. Our flowers and the shades of our woods gladden the one who languishes. The besouler would almost be scorched"

23. Poetizing the essence of poetry¿the poetic spirit as the spirit of the river. The holy as that which is to be poetized

24. The rivers as the poets who found the poetic, upon whose ground human beings dwell

25. The poet as the enigmatic "sign" who lets appear that which is to be shown. The holy as the fire that ignites the poet. The meaning of naming the gods.

26. Poetizing founding builds the stairs upon which the heavenly descend

Concluding Remark¿"Is There a Measure on Earth?

Editor's Epilogue

Translators' Notes

Glossary

English-German

German-English

Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 1996
Medium: Buch
Reihe: Studies in Continental Thought
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780253330642
ISBN-10: 0253330645
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Gebunden
Autor: Heidegger, Martin
Redaktion: Translated by William McNeill and Julia
Übersetzung: McNeill, William H.
Davis, Julia
Auflage: Indiana Press
Hersteller: INDIANA UNIV PR
Abbildungen: black & white illustrations
Maße: 242 x 161 x 22 mm
Von/Mit: Martin Heidegger
Erscheinungsdatum: 22.09.1996
Gewicht: 0,413 kg
Artikel-ID: 104878285
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 1996
Medium: Buch
Reihe: Studies in Continental Thought
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780253330642
ISBN-10: 0253330645
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Gebunden
Autor: Heidegger, Martin
Redaktion: Translated by William McNeill and Julia
Übersetzung: McNeill, William H.
Davis, Julia
Auflage: Indiana Press
Hersteller: INDIANA UNIV PR
Abbildungen: black & white illustrations
Maße: 242 x 161 x 22 mm
Von/Mit: Martin Heidegger
Erscheinungsdatum: 22.09.1996
Gewicht: 0,413 kg
Artikel-ID: 104878285
Warnhinweis