یادداشتهای مربوط به کتابنامه ، واژه نامه و نمایه های داخل اثر
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
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V. 1. Kierkegaard's Either/or, part one: patterns of interpretation / David J. Gouwens -- Narcissism and desire in Kierkegaard's Either/or, part one / Vincent A. McCarthy -- An unsung appreciation of the "musical-erotic" in Mozart's Don Giovanni: Hermann Cohen's nod toward Kierkegaard's Either/or / Martin D. Yaffe -- The unhappiest one and the structure of Kierkegaard's Either/or / John E. Hare -- Fairy tale themes in the papers of A in Kierkegaard's Either/or / Grethe Kjær, translated by Julia Watkin -- Tragedy in the context of Kierkegaard's Either/or / Clyde Holler -- The validity of A's view of tragedy with particular reference to Ibsen's brand / John A. Norris -- Seven seducers: a typology of interpretations of the aesthetic stage in Kierkegaard's "The seducer's diary" / Bradley R. Dewey -- The heterosexual imagination and aesthetic existence in Kierkegaard's Either/or, part one / Wanda Warren Berry -- The no woman's land of Kierkegaardian seduction / Céline Léon -- The ties that bind: the limits of aesthetic reflection in Kierkegaard's Either/or / David S. Stern -- Spirit and presence: a Kierkegaardian analysis / Ronald L. Hall.
متن يادداشت
V. 2. Kierkegaard on self-choice and self-reception: Judge William's admonition / Edward F. Mooney -- Judge William judging woman: existentialism and essentialism in Either/or, part II / Wanda Warren Berry -- Kierkegaard's Either/or and the parable of the prodigal son: or, three rival versions of three rival versions / Charles K. Bellinger -- Judge William in the dock: MacIntyre on Kierkegaard's Ethics / Norman Lillegard -- Judge William, a Christian? / Julia Watkin -- Judge William: bourgeois moralist, knight of faith, teacher? / Michael Plekon -- Kierkegaard's great Critique: Either/or as a Kantian transcendental deduction / Ronald M. Green -- Moral virtue, mental health, and happiness: the moral psychology of Kierkegaard's Judge William / Peter J. Mehl -- The judge in the light of Kierkegaard's own Either/or: some hermeneutical crotchets / Alastair Hannay -- Either/or/or: giving the person his due / Robert L. Perkins -- The place, role and function of the "ultimatum" of Either/or, part two, in Kierkegaard's pseudonymous writings / David R. Law -- The ultimatum of Kierkegaard's Either/or, part, two, and the Two upbuilding discourses of 16 May 1843 / David R. Law -- The initial reception of Either/or / George Pattison.
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"Kierkegaard's Either/Or can be read in multiple ways. One important possible reading at the present time is to read it as a critique of the sexual stereotyping of women (and, implicitly, the stereotyping of men as well) and gender relations that characterize modern Western thought. The stereotyping is not simple and unvarigated. To mention two extremes, Kierkegaard's presentation of gender relations range from the outrageous subjugation and domination of woman shown in the "Diary of the Seducer," with which Kierkegaard closes the first volume of Either/Or, to the affectionate and gentle love that characterizes the relation of Judge William and his wife in the second volume, where the best face is put upon bourgeois marriage. In Either/Or, Part One, Kierkegaard presents what he calls the aesthetic form of life. There he focuses on a large variety of the stereotypical views of women, from a sentimental and whining appraisal of her position in the world, through the view that sexual exploitation is an uncontrollable natural instinct and/or drive for which men are not morally responsible, to the view that women is a jest, not to be taken seriously as a moral and responsible being, and then that she is just there as a sexual object or plaything to be reflectively seduced on the male's terms and for his pleasure or rejection, whatever suits him at the moment. Needless to say, this great variety of views of the "uses" of woman has provoked a large critique, and just as predictable, that critique is as varied as the intellectual tools available for the analysis of a work that is as literary as it is philosophic. The present collection of essays treats these and many other of the most important issues raised in Either/Or in fresh and perceptive ways. Even where familiar themes are argued, the authors introduce innovative interpretive models, new approaches and new materials are appealed to, or new rebuttal arguments against previously held positions are offered. Several of the articles, for instance, appropriate or criticize methods or insights derived from postmodernism and/or feminist philosophy; an approach that would have been unlikely two decades ago"--