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The Role of Poetry and Language in Hegel's Philosophy of Art

Griffin, Daniel
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Abstract

Hegel's view of poetry clarifies the overall role of language in his system and allows him to makes sense of a difficult linguistic issue: how to distinguish between poetry and prose. For Hegel, this distinction is crucial because it illuminates the different ways poetry and prose allow us to understand ourselves as members of an ethical community. In this paper, I argue, using Hegel, that the distinction between poetry and prose can only properly be understood in terms of their fundamentally different kinds of content instead of in terms of any formal differences between the two. Then, I address an objection to Hegel by Paul de Man which uses Hegel's concept of memory to collapse the distinction between poetry and philosophical prose. Finally, I argue that Hegel can respond to this objection by showing how de Man misunderstands how philosophical thought conceptually develops from memory.

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Date
2011-04-20
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Research Projects
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Keywords
Hegel, Poetry, Philosophy of art, Philosophy of language, Paul de Man, German Idealism
Citation
Griffin, Daniel. "The Role of Poetry and Language in Hegel's Philosophy of Art." 2011. Thesis, Georgia State University. https://doi.org/10.57709/1956223
Embargo Lift Date
2011-04-26
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