Stealing a Gift: Kierkegaard's Pseudonyms and the BibleFordham Univ Press, 2004 - 206 páginas This book studies the use of biblical quotations in Kierkegaard's pseudonymous works, as well as Kierkegaard's hermeneutical methods in general. Kierkegaard's mode of writing in these works--indeed, the very method of indirect communication--consists in a certain appropriation of the Bible. Kierkegaard thus becomes God's "plagiarist," repeating the Bible by reinscribing it into his own texts, where it becomes a part of his philosophical discourse and relates to most of his conceptual constructions. The Bible might also be called a gift, but a gift that does not belong to Kierkegaard, one he merely passes along to his reader. The invisible omnipresence of God's Word in the pseudonymous works, as opposed to the signed ones, forces us to revisit the entire distinction between the religious and the aesthetic. |
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... respects , the various approaches to the Bible exhibited by the various Kierkegaardian pseudonyms are ' ways ' of appropriating the Scripture . However , the majority of these are ultimately unsatisfactory . " 22 I would like to present ...
... respect to mimesis and quotation . According to Plato direct discourse implied mimesis , while according to Aristotle both direct and indirect discourse were mimetic . Compagnon has noted that whereas Plato mistrusted repe- tition and ...
... respect to the biblical text itself , and then in the sense of the universalization of the quotation source , since when one author cited another he was in fact invoking the entire tradition of reception.13 Early Modernity The major ...
... respect for the other's individual creativity and the right to protect it . Since quotations create a net of literacy and information , the seeming restriction on them ( acknowledging them as somebody else's property ) not only does not ...
... biblical quotation is also subject to a rule of exchange , and where , with respect to it , one can speak about violence . See Chapter 6. ) Recent Approaches to Quotation In recent times the question of Quotation Theory □ 9.