Termin realizacji zamówienia: ok. 10-14 dni roboczych.
Darmowa dostawa!
What this book evidences is that the sacrosanct quest for transcendence staged by Kerouac and by Ginsberg is underpinned, primarily, by a trope of nullification that acts as a menace for the self.
"The Paradox of Thanatos takes a fresh look at the Beat Generation and its ambiguous aesthetic tenets. Shuttling back and forth between self-destruction and self-liberation, Kerouac and Ginsberg, who are at the center of this new study of 1950s American counterculture, have often been (mis-)understood as prophets of drugs, sex, and the doom of individual creativity. As Harma convincingly argues, however, while revelling in the destruction of the creative self by the stifling forces of mass-consumption and greed, the Beats also managed to forge a more positive vision, and thus carve out a spiritual space that allowed for transcendence and (aesthetic) redemption. Harma's is a timely study that adds an important new angle on postwar American society and its countercultural critics." -Klaus Benesch, Full Professor of English and American Studies; LMU, International Research Professor; LMU, The University of Munich
Foreword - Introduction: The Quest for Thanatos - The Transcendental Ontology of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg - The Mirror on the Road: Kerouac's Vision of Anguish - The Pith of Existential Nothingness: Ginsberg's Moloch - Existential and Transcendental Forms of Engagement in Ginsberg's "Howl" - The Phenomenological Poetics of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg - Kerouac's Solipsistic Revolt: The Strategy of Disengagement - Conclusion: The Paradox of Thanatos - Index.
Educated in France and in the United Kingdom, Tanguy Harma received his PhD in English in 2018 from Goldsmiths, University of London. His international experience in higher education (University of Minnesota, Goldsmiths, University of Southampton) brought him to Istanbul Kültür University, where he currently teaches in the Department of English Language and Literature and continues his exploration of the writings of the American counterculture.