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£39.99

Text, Body and Indeterminacy

Doppelgänger Selves in Pater and Wilde
By: Anna Budziak

£39.99

This book forges a link between the philosophical self and the literary character. Using neo-pragmatist thought, it assesses Pater and Wilde’s characters, contrasting the textual self with the somatic to reveal the ethical gains of a self rooted in the body.

The nature of the self is an important point at which philosophy and literature intersect. Text, Body and Indeterminacy acknowledges this connection by forging a…
£39.99
£39.99
1-84718-507-X , ,
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The nature of the self is an important point at which philosophy and literature intersect. Text, Body and Indeterminacy acknowledges this connection by forging a link between the philosophical concept of the self and the category of the literary character.
The philosophical horizon of Text, Body and Indeterminacy is delineated by the neo-pragmatist debate on selfhood. The book entwines the ideas of Richard Rorty and Richard Shusterman by stressing similarity in their aestheticizing of ethics and by showing the difference in their understanding of the self as textual or bodily. The characters created by Pater and Wilde are freshly assessed within this dual philosophical perspective. Their doppelgängers are seen as the forerunners of postmodernist concepts: the cerebral flâneur is reflected in Rorty’s model “ironist,” and the sensuous aesthete returns through Shusterman’s notion of the somatic self.
Text, Body and Indeterminacy establishes how Pater renders his protagonists through discursive patterns—tropes of Decadence, philosophical theorems, and myths—only to subvert these vocabularies and to emphasize the reality of the body, the extra-textual dimension of the self. It also shows how Wilde’s sensuous personae, both bodily and indeterminate, transcend the vocabularies available to the Wildean flâneurs. Through its interpretations, Text Body and Indeterminacy uniquely combines literary portraits by Pater and Wilde, highlights interlocking themes and, in every reading, points to the ethical gains of tilting the idea of selfhood into the somatic realm.

Anna Budziak teaches at the Department of English, University of Wrocław, Poland, where she specializes in the history and theory of literature. She has authored a book-length study of T. S. Eliot and published a number of articles exploring the interface between literature and philosophy.

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-84718-507-X
  • ISBN13: 978-1-84718-507-5
  • Date of Publication: 2008-05-16

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-0906-3
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-0906-1
  • Date of Publication: 2008-05-16
330

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: DSBF, DSK
  • THEMA: DSBF, DSK
330

Meet The Author