Discourse-analytic, media-historical, and genre-theoretical
approaches are combined here to cast new light on the pre-history
of modern subjectivity and its literary representation. Of central
concern is the connection between reading, writing, and the
constitution of the Subject. The study reveals the ancient roots of
this writing-based form of subjectivity, reveals its affinity to
specific literary forms of representation, and traces its
transformation in the transition to the Christian Middle Ages and
the early modern age.
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