Illegibility

Blanchot and Hegel

Illegibility
William S Allen
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NZ$ 65.99
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NZ$ 52.79
Paperback
h229 x 152mm - 264pg
26 Jan 2023 US
International import eta 7-19 days
9781501376788
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The philosophical significance of Maurice Blanchot' s writings has rarely been in doubt. Specifying the nature and implications of his thinking has proved much less easy, particularly in reference to the key figure of G. W. F. Hegel. Examination reveals that Blanchot' s thinking is persistently oriented towards a questioning of the terms of Hegel' s thought, while nevertheless remaining within its themes, whichshows how rigorously he studied Hegel' s works but also how radical his critique of them became. Equally, it allows for a crucial discussion of the differences between Blanchot' s responses to Hegel and those of Jacques Derrida, with the implicit suggestion that in some ways Blanchot' s critique of Hegel is more far-reaching than that developed by Derrida. William S. Allen demonstrates those aspects of Hegelian thought that permeate Blanchot' s writings and, in turn, develops a detailed three-way analysis of Derrida, Hegel, and Blanchot. The key question around which this analysis develops is that of the relation between thought and language concerning the issue of the infinite and its legibility. Illegibility introduces a new and substantially philosophical account of Blanchot' s importance, and also showshow his writings laid the ground for Derrida' s workswhile developing their own uniquely challenging response to the problems of post-Hegelian thought.
William S. Allen (PhD, University of Warwick) is an independent researcher at the University of Southampton, UK, and the author of the following books: Adorno, Aesthetics, Dissonance: On Dialectics in Modernity (Bloomsbury, 2022); Noir and Blanchot: Deteriorations of the Event (Bloomsbury, 2020); Blanchot and the Outside of Literature (Bloomsbury, 2019); Without End: Sade' s Critique of Reason (Bloomsbury, 2018); Aesthetics of Negativity: Blanchot, Adorno, and Autonomy (2016); and Ellipsis: Of Poetry and the Experience of Language after Heidegger, Hoelderlin, and Blanchot (2007).

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