Philosophy and Poetry

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Mere Being

Wallace Stevens

The Idea of Order at Key West


Of Mere Being 

Things of August


The Necessary Angel


Recommended:

 Critchley, “The Philosophical Significance of a Poem (On Wallace Stevens)”; Gardner, “Wallace Stevens and Metaphysics”; Goldfarb, “Poetics of Variation: Wallace Stevens’ and Paul Valéry’s Poems of the Sea”; McInerny, “The Ancient Quarrel between Philosophy and Poetry”; Kelley, “‘A Radiant and Productive Atmosphere’: Encounters of Wallace Stevens and Stanley Cavell”; Babich, “Wallace Stevens Philosophical Voice”; Pfau, “Confluences: Reading Wallace Stevens”

Posted by babette_babich at 9:15 AM
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  • ▼  2024 (13)
    • ▼  April (3)
      • The Flower of the Mouth
      • Mere Being
      • Hölderlin: Nature and Art
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About Me

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babette_babich
Babette Babich (PhD: Boston College), Professor of Philosophy at Fordham University in New York City. She has taught at Juilliard and the School of Visual Arts, NYC as well as the University of California at San Diego, Georgetown University, Stony Brook University, including Stony Brook Manhattan, Eberhard-Karls Universität, Tübingen and the Humboldt Universität, Berlin, etc.. Among other books, she is author of The Hallelujah Effect: Music, Performance Practice, and Technology (2016 [2013]), Words in Blood, Like Flowers (2006) in addition to books in French and German. Her edited collective volumes include Hermeneutic Philosophies of Social Science (2017) and Reading David Hume’s »Of the Standard of Taste« (2019). She is also founding editor of the journal, New Nietzsche Studies.
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