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Description
Table of Contents
0.0 Witnessness: The Coordinates
1.0 ness
1.1 witness...
1.2 ...martyr
1.3 toccare al fondo
1.4 error's margin
1.5 vicariousness
1.6 talkativeness
1.7 betweenness
1.8 afterwit
2.0 wit
2.1 now
2.2 remains
2.3 nothingness
2.4 lessness
2.5 fitness
2.6 dimness
2.7 witlessness
3.0 witnessness
3.1 readerliness
3.2 witnesswork in the witnessworks
3.3 imagination
3.4 figment
3.5 telltale
3.6 empathy
3.7 model-wit
Thanks, from end to beginning
Bibliography
Index
Product details
Published | Oct 21 2010 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 176 |
ISBN | 9781441100726 |
Imprint | Continuum |
Dimensions | 9 x 5 inches |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A wise and passionate book, whose fundamental ambition - to develop an effective universal ethics - is compellingly accomplished. The conviction with which Harvey establishes Samuel Beckett's rightful place at the heart of this undertaking is thrillingly persuasive. Harvey's thinking is as committed as it is attentive, his readings full of care and insight. This is an inspiring achievement.
Martin Crowley, University Senior Lecturer, Department of French, University of Cambridge, UK
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A witty ethics? Who would have thought it possible? Yet this is just what Robert Harvey gives us in his brilliant Witnessness. With Beckett-like bilingual virtuosity, Harvey invents, stage-manages, and animates a philosophical theater in which, not merely spectators but actors as well, we might learn to move beyond the dreary monolingualism that passes for politics--in which we might learn, as Harvey puts it with characteristic wit and ethical force, to be beside ourselves.
Joseph Litvak, Professor of English, Tufts University, USA
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The last sentinel of witness consciousness, Robert Harvey locates the knocked out ethical transmitters that populate our 'litterature' and continue to signal, if dimly, from the late works of Samuel Beckett as well as those of Dante and Levi. Staying close to the ethical breach, the work travels the edges of translation as an essential philosophical stance. Harvey's grasp redeems purposefulness and refuses to shutter the house of being. Bright with humanist replenishment, Witnessness stares down the darker regions of my own intractable dwellings. The reader should be prepared for jolts of joyfulness!
Avital Ronell, University Professor of the Humanities, Co-Director of Trauma & Violence Transdisciplinary Studies, New York University, USA, and Jacques Derrida Professor of Media and Philosophy, European Graduate School, Switzerland
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In the name of the universal, Robert Harvey's extraordinary book invents and performs an absolutely singular ethics through a practice of reading beyond scholarship, across more than one language, brilliantly weaving Beckett with Primo Levi and Dante, Blanchot and Derrida with Lyotard, in a poetic text of great virtuosity that leaves one both devastated and hopeful.
Geoffrey Bennington, Asa G. Candler Professor of Modern French Thought, and Chair, Department of Comparative Literature, Emory University, USA