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« La poésie n’invente pas un autre monde mais transforme le rapport qu’on a avec celui-ci », affirme Henri Meschonnic en soulignant à quel point le langage poétique - qu’il soit en vers ou en prose - permet d’exprimer notre condition entre un ici et un Ailleurs, entre moi et l’Autre. Un parcours critique et stylistique de la poésie romane méridionale propose dans cet ouvrage une vingtaine de contributions scientifiques pour définir comment le langage poétique, au fil du temps, a contribué à créer l’Ailleurs et ses images. Découverte et voyage, dialectique entre le proche et le lointain, étrangeté du langage, aventures linguistiques, poétiques totalisantes fondées sur l’Ailleurs, conscience de l’invisible ou du différent : telles sont les principales approches proposées par les études réunies qui couvrent les domaines de la littérature ibérique en castillan, en catalan et en portugais, de la littérature italienne en italien et en dialecte, de la littérature d’Amérique centrale et de deux aspects de la poésie française (la poésie de ‘l’amour de loin’ et la reprise de traditions romanes par Aragon). Les auteurs de l’ouvrage ont analysé les formes d’expression de l’Ailleurs en poésie pour trouver, des troubadours occitans jusqu’à notre époque, une volonté commune de découvrir ce que Jules Supervielle a nommé le « paysage humain ».
Romance-language poetry --- Travel in literature. --- History and criticism. --- Voyages and travels in literature --- poésie --- ailleurs --- voyage --- poésie romane
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This volume draws together a diverse array of scholars from across the humanities to formulate and address the question of “ethics and literary practice” for a new decade. In taking up a conjunction whose terms remain productively open to question, fifteen essays survey a range of approaches and topics including genre and disciplinary rhetoric, emergence theory and literary signification, the ethics of alterity, of attention, and of aesthetics, the decolonial and the paracritical, neorealism and contingency, analogy and affect, scripture and national literature. From Seamus Heaney to Hannah Arendt, Teresa Brennan to Stanley Cavell, Ronit Matalon to Édouard Glissant, Uwe Timm to Katherena Vermette, Notes for Echo Lake to the Gospel of St. Matthew, these contributions demonstrate how broadly and fruitfully ramifying its organizing inquiry can be. Bringing such multifarious perspectives to the topic feels only more urgent as language, meaning, and expression enter the crucible of a “post-truth” era.
Ethics --- Stanley Cavell --- Michael Palmer --- poetry --- American philosophy --- Ralph Waldo Emerson --- poetics --- language poetry --- moral perfectionism --- emergence --- aesthetics --- mimesis --- Adorno --- ethics --- literature --- skepticism --- tragedy --- romanticism --- Emersonian perfectionism --- Emmanuel Levinas --- ethics and literature --- analogy --- empathy --- Israeli literature --- Israelis and Palestinians --- narrative ethics --- recognition --- responsibility --- decoloniality --- Kafka --- Timm --- racism --- genocide --- German Empire --- reading --- postcritical --- Afro-Caribbean literature --- African-American literature --- paracritical --- Glissant --- Seamus Heaney --- Jacques Derrida --- Seamus Heaney’s Human Rights Lecture --- po-ethics --- the other --- politics --- redress --- the individual --- Shakespeare --- Dante Alighieri --- Simon Critchley --- Czeslaw Miłosz --- Primo Levi --- alterity --- compassion --- enlarged thinking --- human rights --- judgment --- refugees --- sensus communis --- Teresa Brennan --- Hélène Cixous --- affect --- porosity --- vulnerability --- entre deux --- philosophy --- attention --- representation --- indigenous writers --- gendered violence --- Levinas --- Weil --- pedagogy --- metonymy --- metaphor --- neorealism --- contingency --- dialectics --- Heidegger --- Proust --- time --- literary form --- Being --- Alterity --- Anthropocene --- sonic rhetorics --- non-linguistic turn --- space --- prosody --- etymology --- Plato --- the Other --- orthography --- classical Greek --- Biblical Hebrew --- the reversible vov --- n/a --- Seamus Heaney's Human Rights Lecture --- Hélène Cixous
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