1st Edition

Poetry and the Question of Modernity From Heidegger to the Present

By Ian Cooper Copyright 2020
250 Pages
by Routledge

250 Pages
by Routledge

250 Pages
by Routledge

Interest in Martin Heidegger was recently reawakened by the revelations, in his newly published ‘Black Notebooks’, of the full terrible extent of his political commitments in the 1930s and 1940s. The revelations reminded us of the dark allegiances co-existing with one of the profoundest and most important philosophical projects of the twentieth century—one that is of incomparable importance for... Read more

Introduction

Poetry, philosophy, and modernity: Germany and beyond

Chapter One

Clearings: Finitude, historicity, and the space of poetry

Chapter Two

Straitenings: Paul Celan and world disclosure

Chapter Three

Lightenings: The shades of redress

Chapter Four

Earthings: Enlightenment, religion, and the poem of modernity

Biography

Ian Cooper is Lecturer in German at the University of Kent. He has published widely on German and English literature and on German philosophy. He wrote The Near and Distant God: Poetry, Idealism and Religious Thought from Hölderlin to Eliot (Legenda, 2008). He was co-editor of Aesthetics and Literature in Cambridge University Press’s multi-volume The Impact of Idealism: The Legacy of Post-Kantian German Thought (2013), and of Literature and Religion in the German-Speaking World: From 1200 to the Present Day (Cambridge University Press, 2019).

"Cooper’s argumentation overlaps and doubles back in a complex, almost vertiginous manner and contains much more than can be touched on here…anyone interested in the ramifications…for reading poems in a philosophical and theological context will want to study and quarrel with Ian Cooper’s rich, dense, forceful book."

Charlie Louth, The Times Literary Supplement

'A landmark achievement [...] Ian Cooper [...], with Poetry and the Question of Modernity, has established himself as one of the most inspiring scholars on poetology as a crucial constituent of modernism'.

Rüdiger Görner, Queen Mary University of London, Modern Language Review