Death, Desire and Loss in Western CulturePsychology Press, 2001 - 384 páginas Death, Desire and Loss in Western Culture is a rich testament to our ubiquitous preoccupation with the tangled web of death and desire. In these pages we find nuanced analysis that blends Plato with Shelley, Höouml;lderlin with Foucault. Dollimore, a gifted thinker, is not content to summarize these texts from afar; instead, he weaves a thread through each to tell the magnificent story of the making of the modern individual. |
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Contenido
Eros and Thanatos Change and Loss in the Ancient World | 3 |
Ecclesiastes | 36 |
Christianity Gnosticism and Buddhism | 43 |
MUTABILITY MELANCHOLY | 57 |
Deaths Incessant Motion | 71 |
Death and Identity | 84 |
Shakespeare | 102 |
SOCIAL DEATH | 111 |
Life as a Detour to Death | 180 |
Feuerbach | 201 |
Nietzsche against Schopenhauer | 231 |
Georges Bataille | 249 |
D H Lawrence | 258 |
Thomas Mann | 275 |
Promiscuity and Death | 294 |
The Wonder of the Pleasure | 312 |
The Denial of Death? | 119 |
Degeneration and Dissidence | 128 |
Joseph Conrads | 145 |
Heidegger Kojève and Sartre | 161 |
LATE METAPHYSICS | 171 |
Notes | 329 |
360 | |
381 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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