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This fully-annotated documentary novel explores the life and
thought of Walter Benjamin, imaginatively examining its
implications in the political context of a post-War London estate.
A startling critical-creative examination of one of the 20th
Century's leading thinkers, "The Late Walter Benjamin" is a
documentary novel that juxtaposes the life and death of Walter
Benjamin with the days, hours and minutes of a working-class
council estate on the edge of London in post-war Austerity England.
The novel centres on one particular tenant who claims to be Walter
Benjamin, and only ever uses words written by Benjamin, apparently
oblivious that the real Benjamin committed suicide 20 years earlier
whilst fleeing the Nazis. Initially set in the sixties, the text
slips back to the early years of the estate and to Benjamin's last
days, as he moves across Europe seeking ever-more desperately to
escape the Third Reich. Through this fictional narrative, John
Schad explores not only the emergence of Benjamin's thinking from a
politicised Jewish theology forced to confront the rise of Nazism
but also the implications of his utopian Marxism, forged in exile,
for the very different context of a displaced working class
community in post-war Britain. This series aims to showcase new
work at the forefront of religion and literature through short
studies written by leading and rising scholars in the field. Books
will pursue a variety of theoretical approaches as they engage with
writing from different religious and literary traditions.
Collectively, the series will offer a timely critical intervention
to the interdisciplinary crossover between religion and literature,
speaking to wider contemporary interests and mapping out new
directions for the field in the early twenty-first century.
This title was first published in 2001. A volume of essays on the
Pauline, ecclesiastical body of Christ -the church. It is, of
course, not possible to separate completely one body of Christ from
another, and the essays do not make the attempt. The dark,
institutional history of the church is a running theme, a running
sore, throughout the volume; in that sense the essays respond to
Michel Foucault's insistence that we should be mindful of the
institutions that surreptitiously inform our discourse and culture.
The essays deal with the myriad of ways in which the church is
named, spoken and, above all, written in the age of secularization.
In this sense, the contributors are simply exploring the
relationship between the church and modern writing.
This title was first published in 2001. A volume of essays on the
Pauline, ecclesiastical body of Christ -the church. It is, of
course, not possible to separate completely one body of Christ from
another, and the essays do not make the attempt. The dark,
institutional history of the church is a running theme, a running
sore, throughout the volume; in that sense the essays respond to
Michel Foucault's insistence that we should be mindful of the
institutions that surreptitiously inform our discourse and culture.
The essays deal with the myriad of ways in which the church is
named, spoken and, above all, written in the age of secularization.
In this sense, the contributors are simply exploring the
relationship between the church and modern writing.
Within the work of both Jacques Derrida and Walter Benjamin there
is a buried theatricality, a theatre to-come. And in the last
fifteen years there has been a growing awareness of this
theatricality. To date, though, there has not been a published
stage play about either Derrida or Benjamin Cue Derrida| Benjamin,
a volume that brings together two tragi-comic plays which mirror
each other in a host of ways - above all, in the way that the
central philosophical figure is displaced, or not quite where or
when we would expect to find them. In Derrida's case, it is Oxford
in 1968; in Benjamin's case, it is somewhere (or nowhere) near
London in 1948. These, then, are plays in which the philosopher is
exiled, or elsewhere - not quite himself. This a volume for anyone
with an eye or ear for where theatre or performance meets
philosophy - students, scholars, readers, actors.
Someone called Jacques Derrida, someone called him on the phone,
someone who was dead -- this was August 22nd 1979. A mystery, he
thought; but it is a mystery that began more than ten years
earlier, in 1968, when Derrida, a philosopher, visits Oxford and
there, before the very eyes of the Philosophy Sub-Faculty, he dies,
several times. Murder, he thought. And so I shall investigate, and
begin with a sign that the philosopher says he left within a book
from the thirteenth century, a strange fortune-telling book that he
had found in the oldest part of Oxford's Bodleian Library. In the
book are a host of cryptic questions, but the philosopher directs
us to one in particular, a peculiar question about a boy, and the
question is this: Does the boy live? The philosopher will not,
though, give the answer; he requires, instead, that we go to Oxford
to open the book for ourselves.
Swinburne called him a bad poet, Tennyson called him dull,
Saintsbury called him thin. John Schad celebrates Clough the
anti-poet, a loving laureate of the extraordinary dull, who is so
thin we can see through, or beyond him. Clough, argues Schad, never
gets in the way of the world, or worlds, of which he writes. And
these worlds are many: ranging from the orthodox world of the
Anglican Oxford that Clough famously abandons, through the
turbulent worlds of Paris and Rome that Clough visits in the wake
of the revolutionary events of 1848, to the quietly desperate world
of Clough's final years. For Schad, though, Clough's defining world
is the very strange world of continental thought, a world which
makes him a most un-Victorian Victorian.
Is there life after theory? If the death of the Author has now been
followed by the death of the Theorist, what's left? Indeed, who's
left? To explore such riddles, "Life.After.Theory" brings together
new interviews with four theorists who are left, each a major
figure in their own right: Jacques Derrida, Frank Kermode, Toril
Moi and Christopher Norris. Framed and introduced by Michael Payne
and John Schad, the interviews pursue a whole range of topics, both
familiar and unfamiliar. Among other things, Derrida, Kermode, Moi
and Norris discuss being an outsider, taking responsibility,
valuing books, getting angry, doing science, listening to music,
remembering Empson, re-reading de Beauvoir, being Jewish, asking
forgiveness, smoking in libraries, befriending the dead, committing
bigamy, forgetting to forget, thinking, not thinking, believing,
and being mad. These four key thinkers explore why there is life
after theory, but not as we know it.
Within the work of both Jacques Derrida and Walter Benjamin there
is a buried theatricality, a theatre to-come. And in the last
fifteen years there has been a growing awareness of this
theatricality. To date, though, there has not been a published
stage play about either Derrida or Benjamin Cue Derrida| Benjamin,
a volume that brings together two tragi-comic plays which mirror
each other in a host of ways - above all, in the way that the
central philosophical figure is displaced, or not quite where or
when we would expect to find them. In Derrida's case, it is Oxford
in 1968; in Benjamin's case, it is somewhere (or nowhere) near
London in 1948. These, then, are plays in which the philosopher is
exiled, or elsewhere - not quite himself. This a volume for anyone
with an eye or ear for where theatre or performance meets
philosophy - students, scholars, readers, actors.
This book brings together a number of John Schad's very best
uncollected essays, interleaved with a selection of
autobiographical poems and a striking new work that brings together
both critical and creative modes of writing. Turns thus plots the
intriguing trajectory of Schad's very distinctive work over the
last twenty years -- a trajectory that moves from a series of
essays that juggle Christian, Marxist and Derridean intuitions,
through a radically literary engagement with Deconstruction, to a
daringly critical-creative mode of writing. In this exciting new
field, as in the more established world of literature and religion,
Schad is an idiosyncratic and sometimes audacious pioneer. The book
is to be published simultaneously in hardback and paperback to
accommodate adoption on critical-creative courses at both
undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
'Each century', wrote Charles Dickens ' is] more amazed by the
century following it than by all the centuries before'. "Victorians
in Theory" explores the startling conceit that nineteenth-century
poetry is amazed by twentieth-century literary theory. In a daring
and exciting departure from critical convention, Schad re-reads
poststructuralist theory through Victorian poetry. Each chapter
pairs a poet with a theorist: Robert Browning meets Jacques
Derrida; Christina Rossetti encounters Luce Irigaray; Matthew
Arnold is after Michel Foucault; Gerald Manley Hopkins dreams with
Jacques Lacan; and Elizabeth Barrett Browning haunts Helene Cixous.
Reading both across and between these writers, Schad opens up a
radically intertextual space; he wanders, in Matthew Arnold's
words, 'between two worlds'. Across this no-man's land appear a
host of unlikely spectres, among them T. S. Eliot, Martin Luther,
Friedrich Nietzsche, Lewis Carroll's Alice, Walter Benjamin's
'angel of history', and the woman taken in adultery. This
groundbreaking book will fascinate anyone interested in the
Victorians or theory; at once rigorous and readable, it will appeal
to both the scholar and the student.
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A Laodicean (Paperback, New Ed.)
Thomas Hardy; Edited by John Schad; Introduction by John Schad; Notes by John Schad; Preface by Patricia Ingham
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R335
R275
Discovery Miles 2 750
Save R60 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A Laodicean draws deeply on Hardy's personal experience: his early life as an architect, his frustration in love and his ambivalence about theology and the modern age. The daughter of a wealthy railway magnate, Paula Power inherits De Stancy Castle, an ancient castle in need of modernization. She commissions George Somerset, a young architect, to undertake the work. Somerset falls in love with Paula but she, the Laodicean of the title, is torn between his admiration and that of Captain De Stancy, whose old-world romanticism contrasts with Somerset's forward-looking outlook. Paula's vacillation, however, is not only romantic. Her ambiguity regarding religion, politics and social progress is a reflection of the author's own. This new Penguin Classics edition of Hardy's text contains an introduction and notes that illuminate and clarify these themes and draws parallels between the text and the author's life and views.
This fully-annotated documentary novel explores the life and
thought of Walter Benjamin, imaginatively examining its
implications in the political context of a post-War London estate.
A startling critical-creative examination of one of the 20th
Century's leading thinkers, "The Late Walter Benjamin" is a
documentary novel that juxtaposes the life and death of Walter
Benjamin with the days, hours and minutes of a working-class
council estate on the edge of London in post-war Austerity England.
The novel centres on one particular tenant who claims to be Walter
Benjamin, and only ever uses words written by Benjamin, apparently
oblivious that the real Benjamin committed suicide 20 years earlier
whilst fleeing the Nazis. Initially set in the sixties, the text
slips back to the early years of the estate and to Benjamin's last
days, as he moves across Europe seeking ever-more desperately to
escape the Third Reich. Through this fictional narrative, John
Schad explores not only the emergence of Benjamin's thinking from a
politicised Jewish theology forced to confront the rise of Nazism
but also the implications of his utopian Marxism, forged in exile,
for the very different context of a displaced working class
community in post-war Britain. This series aims to showcase new
work at the forefront of religion and literature through short
studies written by leading and rising scholars in the field. Books
will pursue a variety of theoretical approaches as they engage with
writing from different religious and literary traditions.
Collectively, the series will offer a timely critical intervention
to the interdisciplinary crossover between religion and literature,
speaking to wider contemporary interests and mapping out new
directions for the field in the early twenty-first century.
This book brings together a number of John Schad's very best
uncollected essays, interleaved with a selection of
autobiographical poems and a striking new work that brings together
both critical and creative modes of writing. Turns thus plots the
intriguing trajectory of Schad's very distinctive work over the
last twenty years -- a trajectory that moves from a series of
essays that juggle Christian, Marxist and Derridean intuitions,
through a radically literary engagement with Deconstruction, to a
daringly critical-creative mode of writing. In this exciting new
field, as in the more established world of literature and religion,
Schad is an idiosyncratic and sometimes audacious pioneer. The book
is to be published simultaneously in hardback and paperback to
accommodate adoption on critical-creative courses at both
undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
Someone called Jacques Derrida, someone called him on the phone,
someone who was dead -- this was August 22nd 1979. A mystery, he
thought; but it is a mystery that began more than ten years
earlier, in 1968, when Derrida, a philosopher, visits Oxford and
there, before the very eyes of the Philosophy Sub-Faculty, he dies,
several times. Murder, he thought. And so I shall investigate, and
begin with a sign that the philosopher says he left within a book
from the thirteenth century, a strange fortune-telling book that he
had found in the oldest part of Oxford's Bodleian Library. In the
book are a host of cryptic questions, but the philosopher directs
us to one in particular, a peculiar question about a boy, and the
question is this: Does the boy live? The philosopher will not,
though, give the answer; he requires, instead, that we go to Oxford
to open the book for ourselves.
Is there life after theory? If the death of the Author has now been
followed by the death of the Theorist, what's left? Indeed, who's
left? To explore such riddles, this volume brings together
interviews with four theorists who are left, each a major figure in
their own right: Jacques Derrida, Frank Kermode, Toril Moi and
Christopher Norris. Framed and introduced by Michael Payne and John
Schad, the interviews pursue a whole range of topics, both familiar
and unfamiliar. Among other things, Derrida, Kermode, Moi and
Norris discuss being an outsider, taking responsibility, valuing
books, getting angry, doing science, listening to music,
remembering Empson, rereading de Beauvoir, being Jewish, asking
forgiveness, smoking in libraries, befriending the dead, committing
bigamy, forgetting to forget, thinking, not thinking, believing and
being mad. These four key thinkers explore why there is life after
theory. But not as we know it.
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