Given World and Time

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Category=JBCC
Category=QDTJ
citations
cultural politics
enlightenment
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
hetero-temporalities
historiography
image-thinking
intricate temporalities
mediations
modernity
narrations
philosophy
political philosophy
post-communism
post-socialism
temporality
time

Product details

  • ISBN 9789639776272
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Oct 2008
  • Publisher: Central European University Press
  • Publication City/Country: HU
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The interconnections of time with historical thought and knowledge have come powerfully to the fore since the 1970s. An international group of scholars, from a range of fields including literary theory, history of ideas, cultural anthropology, philosophy, intellectual history and theology, philology, and musicology, address the matter of time and temporalities. The volume's essays, divided into four main topical groups question critically the key problem of context, connecting it to the problem of time. Contexts, the essays suggest, are not timeless. Time and its contexts are only partly given to us: to the primordial donations of time and world correspond our epistemic, moral, and practical modes of receiving what has been granted. The notion of context may have radically different parameters in different historical, cultural, and disciplinary situations. Topics include the deep antiquity, and the timeless time of eternity, as well as formal philosophies of history and the forms of histories implicit in individual and community experience. The medium specific use of time and history are examined with regard to song, image, film, oral narration, and legal discourse.

Tyrus Miller is Professor of Literature and Provostof Cowell Collegeat the University of Californiaat Santa Cruz. He is the author of Late Modernism:Politics, Fiction, and the Arts Between the WorldWars (University of California Press, 1999) and Singular Examples: Artistic Politics and theNeo-Avant-Garde (Northwestern UniversityPress, 2008).