philosophy and poetic madness in Plato, Hölderlin, and Nietzsche /
Silke-Maria Weineck.
Albany :
State University of New York Press,
c2002.
xii, 179 p. ;
23 cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 167-173) and index.
Introduction: Future Perfect -- Cassandra, or the Belated Truth of Madness -- Total and Restricted Madness -- The Limits of Madness and the Limits of Philosophy -- From Divine Reason to Madness under the Death of God -- Talking About Homer: Poetic Madness, Philosophy, and the Birth of Criticism -- Talking about Homer -- Phaedrus: Madly Made Meaning -- Philosophy's Mad Demon -- The Abyss Above: Holderlin: Madness, Philosophy, and Tragedy in the Absence of the Gods -- Introduction: Madness and the Labor of Poetry -- Translating Greece -- Antigone and Oedipus: Madness and Sign -- Nietzsche: The Marketplaces of Madness -- Introduction: Nietzsche's Madness and the Fear of Contamination -- The Artist in the Ditch, or from Metaphysics to Metaphysiology -- Meta-Morality, or the Madness of New Thought -- The Last Madman on the Marketplace -- The Hyperborean: La Vache Qui Danse -- Conclusion: Logos and Pallaksch: Paul Celan's "Tubingen, Janner" -- Anachrony -- Appropriation -- Anamnesis.