The Fateful Discourse of Worldly Things

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Stanford University Press, 1997 M07 1 - 428 pages
This broad interdisciplinary and comparative study of the ways in which we discursively "make" the world and its things aims to go beyond the "poetic thinking" of Heidegger toward a more pragmatic way of interpreting concrete social, cultural, and political experience.

The book outlines three constitutive functions of world-making. Endowing signifies the direct provision of the "wherewithal" that must come into being if anything else is to come into being. Enabling develops or facilitates what is endowed; it is a kind of education in being-in-the-world. Entitling embraces the realm of justice and decision; it concerns what is right for human beings to have and do and be.

Placing these functions in contemporary contexts, the book offers as an alternative some perspectives of American pragmatism (Dewey, Peirce, James, Mead, Buchler) and Continental philosophy (Arendt, Merleau-Ponty, Heidegger, Husserl, Barthes, Gramsci). The book closely examines the thinking of Hobbes, Descartes, Vico, Calderón, and Jefferson and several literary figures and thinkers (Yeats, Emerson, Hopkins, Baudelaire, Pascal, Rilke, Frost, Brecht). Throughout, the book investigates and questions the tradition of possessive individualism interpreted by modern scholars, notably Pocock.

The book is in five parts. Part I argues a need to move beyond deconstructing toward reconstructing. Part II considers the interactions of endowing, enabling, and entitling. In Part III, the author explores the ways in which discourse works in the Cartesian discourse of reason, and the phenomenon of Manifest Destiny as rendered by Frost. The focus of Part IV is incorporating, which builds on Merleau-Ponty's concept of flesh, or the process by which the body acts and becomes fully worldly. Part V addresses the phenomena of experience in a variety of modes, including the role of story and natality, experimental theater, the epistolary novel, and representations of the heroic Lucretia.

A postscript, exploring the "conclusion" with which scholarly books typically end, offers a perspectivist reading of the final text, Emerson's "Experience."
 

Contents

Beginning
1
Reconstructing
11
Constituting
79
Endowing Enabling Entitling 85 4 Impairing
90
Constituting Political Discourse 98 6 Social
103
Versions of Declension 114 11 When Destiny
124
Discoursing
151
Presentment 157 5 Discoursing of Things
160
Incorporating
219
Experiencing
289
Introductory Overview 289 2 Deriving
297
4 Experience Story Dialogue
303
Experiencing Experimenting and Theatre
314
Sublation and Subsumption 324 8 Expense
349
Consequence and Reflection
359
Concluding
371

Discoursing of Made Things 171 9 Discourse
181
A Destined Center 188 12 Dangerous
199
14
212
NOTES
387
INDEX
403

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About the author (1997)

David Halliburton is Professor of English, Comparative Literature, and Modern Thought and Literature at Stanford University. He is the author of several books, most recently The Color of the Sky: A Study of Stephen Crane.

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