Philosophy the Day after Tomorrow / Edition 1

Philosophy the Day after Tomorrow / Edition 1

by Stanley Cavell
ISBN-10:
0674022327
ISBN-13:
9780674022324
Pub. Date:
10/31/2006
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
ISBN-10:
0674022327
ISBN-13:
9780674022324
Pub. Date:
10/31/2006
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
Philosophy the Day after Tomorrow / Edition 1

Philosophy the Day after Tomorrow / Edition 1

by Stanley Cavell

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Overview

Nietzsche characterized the philosopher as the man of tomorrow and the day after tomorrow—a description befitting Stanley Cavell, with his longtime interest in freedom in the face of an uncertain future. This interest, particularly in the role of language in freedom of the will, is fully engaged in this volume, a collection of retrospective and forward-thinking essays on performative language and on performances in which the question of freedom is the underlying concern.

Seeking for philosophy the same spirit and assurance conveyed by an artist like Fred Astaire, Cavell presents essays that explore the meaning of grace and gesture in film and on stage, in language and in life. Cavell's range is broad—from Astaire to Shakespeare's soulful Cordelia. He also analyzes filmic gestures that bespeak racial stereotypes, opening a key topic that runs through the book: What is the nature of praise? The theme of aesthetic judgment, viewed in the light of "passionate utterance," is everywhere evident in Cavell's effort to provoke a renaissance in American thought. Critical to such a rebirth is a recognition of the centrality of the "ordinary" to American life. Here Cavell, who has alluded to Thoreau throughout, takes up the quintessential American philosopher directly, and in relation to Heidegger; he also returns to his great philosophical love, Wittgenstein. His collection of essays ends, appropriately enough, with an essay on collecting.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674022324
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 10/31/2006
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Stanley Cavell (1926–2018) was Walter M. Cabot Professor of Aesthetics and the General Theory of Value, Emeritus, at Harvard University. His numerous books include The Claim of Reason, Cities of Words, and Philosophy the Day after Tomorrow.

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. Something Out of the Ordinary

2. The Interminable Shakespearean Text

3. Fred Astaire Asserts the Right to Praise

4. Henry James Returns to America and to Shakespeare

5. Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow

6. What is the Scandal of Skepticism?

7. Performative and Passionate Utterance

8. The Wittgensteinian Event

9. Thoreau Thinks of Ponds, Heidegger of Rivers

10. The World as Things

Works Cited

Acknowledgments

Index

What People are Saying About This

Robert Harrison

Over the course of his long and prodigious career, Stanley Cavell has been concerned with a number of recurrent issues, both philosophical (Wittgenstein, J. L. Austin and ordinary language philosophy; Thoreau, Emerson, and Emersonianism; skepticism) and cultural (America; film; Shakespeare). He has also been, and continues to be, the foremost advocate in this country for a rapprochement between philosophy and literature with a merging of what are known as the Anglo-American and the Continental strains of philosophy. Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow comprises his most recent set of meditations on these issues, and as such it offers at once a welcome revisitation of his work to date and a nuanced, considered extension of his thinking. As is fitting for an intellectual of Cavell's standing, it also provides an opportunity to witness a philosopher at the height of his maturity working through questions to which he has devoted his extraordinary career.
Robert Harrison, author of The Body of Beatrice and The Dominion of the Dead

Angus Fletcher

Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow advances not only on his previous collections of formal papers, but also on the autobiographical Pitch of Philosophy (1994), by conveying an approach to thought that gives thought itself its due, as an ongoing process of momentary involvement, as distinct from any more mechanized, "automated," positivistic or sparsely logical methods of analysis--and equally we must recall that after all Stanley Cavell's background was precisely given by a various approach to analytic philosophy. The reader is here constantly encouraged in rethinking Wittgenstein's willingness to consult the mysteries of ordinary language itself. In turn, with Stanley Cavell himself, we see the ways this particular philosophy is always unfurling and refolding the flag of its ideas. These essays, sharing some properties of musical variation, deal with the question of individual and social freedom. This crux arises from our being users of language, in our achieving ordinary identity, which is where, in our human condition, the most important philosophical issues may be seen to locate their limits.
Angus Fletcher, author of A New Theory for American Poetry

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