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Dante and the Sense of Transgression Professor William Franke

Dante and the Sense of Transgression By Professor William Franke

Dante and the Sense of Transgression by Professor William Franke


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Dante and the Sense of Transgression Summary

Dante and the Sense of Transgression: 'The Trespass of the Sign' by Professor William Franke

In Dante and the Sense of Transgression, William Franke combines literary-critical analysis with philosophical and theological reflection to cast new light on Dante's poetic vision. Conversely, Dante's medieval masterpiece becomes our guide to rethinking some of the most pressing issues of contemporary theory. Beyond suggestive archetypes like Adam and Ulysses that hint at an obsession with transgression beneath Dante's overt suppression of it, there is another and a prior sense in which transgression emerges as Dante's essential and ultimate gesture. His work as a poet culminates in the Paradiso in a transcendence of language towards a purely ineffable, mystical experience beyond verbal expression. Yet Dante conveys this experience, nevertheless, in and through language and specifically through the transgression of language, violating its normally representational and referential functions. Paradiso's dramatic sky-scapes and unparalleled textual performances stage a deconstruction of the sign that is analyzed philosophically in the light of Blanchot, Levinas, Derrida, Barthes, and Bataille, as transgressing and transfiguring the very sense of sense.

Dante and the Sense of Transgression Reviews

Written in elegant and astonishingly readable prose, William Franke's volume gives a lucid portrait of a fundamental question that lies at the heart of Dante's Divine Comedy and has resurfaced in contemporary French philosophical reflection: poetic theology as a radical, transgressive mode of knowledge. In mapping the ground of this fascinating debate, William Franke places Dante at the boundaries of thought and recovers the timeliness of his spiritual vision. This book is a must-read for historians of religion, Dante scholars, literary critics, and adepts of cultural studies. * Giuseppe Mazzotta, Yale University, USA *
Can language meaningfully point us to the divine? Is it possible for us to transcend our humanity to touch the mystery which surrounds it? How might the idolatrous projections of our ego be transgressed? These are just some of the questions provoked by William Franke's scintillating book. By bringing Dante's Paradiso and French Theory into mutually illuminating dialogue, Franke invites his readers to explore the outer limits of sense and meaning, and to consider seriously the theological implications of the unknowing at the heart of literary expression. His reflections will spark the interest not only of Dante scholars, theologians and literary theorists, but of anyone interested in probing the connections between literature and theology. * Vittorio Montemaggi, University of Notre Dame, USA *

About Professor William Franke

William Franke is Professor of Comparative Literature and Religious Studies at Vanderbilt University, USA. He is an Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung Fellow, a previous Fulbright University of Salzburg Distinguished Chair in Intercultural Theology and his published books include Dante's Interpretive Journey and Poetry and Apocalypse: Theological Disclosures of Poetic Language.

Table of Contents

Preface \\ Introduction: Dante's Implication in the Transgressiveness He Condemns \\ Part I: Language and Beyond \\ 2. The Linguistic Turn of Transgression in the Paradiso \\ 3. At the Limits of Language, or Reading Dante through Blanchot \\ 4. The Step/Not Beyond \\ 5. The Neuter-Nothing except nuance \\ 6. Forgetting and the Limits of Experience-Letargo and the Argo \\ 7. Speech-The Vision that is Non-Vision \\ 8. Writing-The Essential Experience \\ 9. The Gaze of Orpheus \\ 10. Beatrice and Eurydice \\ 11. Blanchot's Dark Gaze and the Experience of Literature as Transgression \\ 12. Negative Theology and the Space of Literature-Order beyond Order \\ Part II: Authority and Powerlessness (Kenosis) \\ 13. Necessary Transgression-Human versus Transcendent Authority \\ 14. Dante and the Popes \\ 15. Against the Emperor? \\ 16. Inevitable Transgression along a Horizontal Axis \\ 17. Heterodox Dante and Christianity \\ 18. Christianity an Inherently Transgressive Religion? \\ Part III: Transgression and Transcendence \\ 19. Transgression and the Sacred in Bataille and Foucault \\ 20. Transgression as the Path to God-The Authority of Inner Experience \\ 21. Transcendence and the Sense of Transgression \\ Appendix: Levinasian Transcendence and the Ethical Vision of the Paradiso \\ 1. Prolegomenon on the Sense of Ethics \\ 2. Paradiso as the Trace of the Other \\ 3. Witnessing to the Transcendent \\ 4. Ethical Un-Selfing of Metaphysical Self-Building \\ Notes \\ Index

Additional information

NLS9781441160423
9781441160423
1441160426
Dante and the Sense of Transgression: 'The Trespass of the Sign' by Professor William Franke
New
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
2012-11-22
192
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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