In "Money, Language, and Thought," Marc Shell explores the
interactions between linguistic and economic production as they
inform discourse from Chretien de Troyes to Heidegger. Close
readings of works such as the medieval grail legends, The Merchant
of Venice, Goethe's Faust, and Poe's "The Gold Bug" reveal how
discourse has responded to the dissociation of symbol from thing
characteristic of money, and how the development of increasingly
symbolic currencies has involved changes in the meaning of
meaning.
Pursuing his investigations into the modern era, Shell points
out significant internalization of economic form in Kant, Hegel,
and Heidegger. He demonstrates how literature and philosophy have
been driven to account self-critically for a "money of the mind"
that pervades all discourse, and concludes the book with a
discomforting thesis about the cultural and political limits of
literature and philosophy in the modern world.
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