Don Quixote's Impossible Quest for the Absolute in Literature : Fiction, Reflection, and Negative Theology
Don Quixote's Impossible Quest for the Absolute in Literature : Fiction, Reflection, and Negative Theology
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Author(s): Franke, William
ISBN No.: 9781032688961
Pages: 240
Year: 202407
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 252.00
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

List of Figures Acknowledgments Prologue Concerning Apophatic Theology in Literary Representation and Reflection Chapter 1 The Revelation of Laughter: Cervantes''s Comic Christian Muse The Power of Laughter--The Wisdom of Folly A Negative Theological Reading of Don Quixote Fool for Christ as Universal Sage Don Quixote''s Contemporaneity and Universality The Holy Fool as Christian Saint and Crusader Unamuno and Ortega: Dialectic of the Religious and the Secular Chapter 2 Self-reflective Dynamics of Revelation in Literature A. Self-subversive Mirroring Between and Among the Protagonists The Knight of Mirrors and of the White Moon as Self-reflection of Don Quixote Don Quixote''s Ideal Reflected in Sancho--and Inversely Self-reflexivity as Self-fulfilling Ideal Becoming a Book and Reading One''s Life B. Self-reflection and Undermining the Authority of the Author Self-reflective Questioning of Authorship Cervantes''s Self-representations in the Prologues Authorship and Originality Self-reflexivity in the Narrative Structure of Fiction Fictionalization of Author by Self-reflection--Kafka and Borges The Dialectic of Self-reflection and Negative Theology Chapter 3 Negative Theology of the Novel The Novel as Breaking Down the Separation of Styles--Auerbach Recognition Scenes: Epiphanies and Theophanies The Novel as Subjective Reflective Medium and Genre Reflecting Concrete Reality The Novel as Subjectively Lived Experience The Novel as a New and Comprehensive Genre Dialectics of Wholeness The In-breaking of External Reality Into Fiction Mutual Contamination of History and Fiction and Their Exposure to Externality Maese Pedro''s Puppet Show and Unamuno''s Move Through Fiction to Reality Ortega on Literary Genre: From Epic Myth to Novelistic Formal Reality Novelistic Creation of Formal Reality--Ortega and Maese Pedro''s Puppet Theatre Fiction and Realization of the Ideal Chapter 4 Visionary Experience in the Cave of Montesinos as Revelation via Parody The Vision of Montesinos, or the Part of Fiction in the Construction of Prophetic Revelation The Question of Truth Raised by the Vision in the Cave Artifice and the Limits of the Control of the Author The Reality that Our Fictions Become The Ontological Argument for Dulcinea''s Existence Real Costs of One''s Fictive Inventions Repetitions of Visionary Revelation following Montesinos Sancho''s Perversion of Visionary Experience--Clavileño Visionary Revelation After the Cave of Montesinos--Its Translation Into the Everyday Chapter 5 Dialectic of Religious Truth and Its Secular Simulation Religious and Anti-religious Interpretations of the Quixote: Religion Versus Secularity Velázquez''s Las Meninas: Self-reflexivity and the Other Camacho''s Wedding as Theatrical Artifice and Its Sacramental Transfiguration Baroque Aesthetics of Contrast, the Grotesque, and Theatricalization of the World Feminine Beauty as Ideal and as Simulation Transvestism, Love of Artifice, and the Transhuman Formal Dimension of Reality--Names as Revelation--Antonomasia Archetypal Image and Primal Naming--Spitzer''s Linguistic Perspectivism The Epistolary Novel and the Scriptural Ideal Dialectic of Self-reflective Desengaño and Disinterested Dedication Chapter 6 A Political Novel: Representation of an Idealized World Versus Contemporary Reality The Baroque Age: Aesthetics of the Ideal, Realism, and the Unrepresentable Barataria as Anti-utopia of a Perfectly Artificial State Knowing One''s Limits and Becoming Oneself: Sancho in "Hell" The Contemporary Expulsion Drama and the Apotheosis of Fiction The Realistic Political Novel as an Overture to Modernity Barcelona and the New Materialism Chapter 7 The Passion of Sancho Panza and the Death of Don Quixote The Wise Fool--Like Master Like Servant: Sancho''s Governance Sancho''s Assuming the Lead Position in the Duo Visionary Revisitations--Sancho in the Role of the Christ Figure Altisidora''s Invention of a Visionary Revelation Don Quixote''s Death and Bequest--The Heroism of the Common Person? The Christian Death of Alonso Quijano--and Sancho''s Passion to Live Chapter 8 The Metaphysics of Fiction The Force of Fiction Real Tragedy in Fiction--Carl Schmitt Ambiguity of Fictive Truth in Epic Tradition and Its Modern Parody What Makes a Book of Poetic Literature Great--or Revelatory? The Integration of Fiction into Reality and Vice Versa--Vargas Llosa Self-reflection at the Juncture of Fiction and Ultimate Reality The Apophatic in Literature--An Aesthetic Dimension of the Real Chapter 9 Philosophies of Quixotism Unamuno''s Quixotesque Turning of Philosophy into Religion Ortega''s Cervantesque Philosophy of Desengaño as a Theory of Genres Unamuno on Quixotism as the True Philosophy and Religion of the Spanish People Unamuno''s Staging of the Battle Between Reason and Faith--Reason''s Self-undermining The Novel as Philosophy, Don Quixote as Tragicomedy Towards Ortega''s Philosophy of Relations as a Type of Secular Revelation Maria Zambrano''s Mediation of Two Philosophical Masters A Parting Reflection Index.


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