The Cult of the Ego: The Self in Modern LiteratureTransaction Publishers - Всего страниц: 225 Goethe once remarked that "every emancipation of the spirit is pernicious unless there is a corresponding growth of control." This remark may be taken as a motto for Eugene Goodheart's study of an aspect of the cultural history of the past two hundred years. In separate chapters on Rousseau, Stendhal, Goethe and Carlyle, Dostoevsky, Whitman, Lawrence, and Joyce, Goodheart discovers a community of concern which he calls the cult of the ego. |
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... conceive of a mode of existence alternative to the life - in - death in which he lives is baffled . Mulloy confesses that " death is a condition I have never been able to conceive to my satisfaction and which therefore cannot go down in ...
... conception of himself who feels his self- respect menaced at its very foundations is like a man threat- ened by physical destruction . II " That I was a great transcendent sinner I confess . But still I had hopes of forgiveness ...
... conception of justice . One of the major links between Rousseau's apologetic writings and his political writings is a passion for justice . In the apologetic writings we cannot escape the concern with motive : the passion for justice ...
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Содержание
5 | |
The Aesthetic Morality of Stendhal | 32 |
Goethe Carlyle and The Sorrows of Werther | 57 |
Dostoevsky and the Hubris of the Immoralist | 86 |
Nietzsche and the Aristocracy of Passion | 110 |
Walt Whitman Democracy and the Self | 129 |
Lawrence and Christ | 157 |
Joyce and the Career of the ArtistHero | 179 |
Notes | 197 |
Bibliography of Books and Essays cited | 210 |
Index | 217 |