The Poetics of the Sensible
Stanislas Breton author Sarah Horton translator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:8th Feb '24
£85.00
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In the first English language translation of this classic late 20th-century text within French Catholic thought, Poetics of the Sensible brings together insights from Neoplatonism and phenomenology with a distinctive and innovative approach. Taking a stance within the generative conception of human language represented by continental thinkers such as Humboldt and Herder and powerfully articulated today by Charles Taylor, Stanislas Breton expands the sense of the “poetic”—the constructive meaning-bearing capacity that is a core characteristic of humanity—to include the body and its senses phenomenologically intertwined with the world. Defying Heidegger’s prohibition on the question of God alongside contemporary thinkers such as Jean-Luc Marion, Jean-Louis Chrétien and Emmanuel Falque, he boldly writes of God, of the angel, of the icon, and of prayer in a refusal to bracket his religious faith. Against a Neoplatonic backdrop, Breton promotes the dense material dimensions of embodied signification as paradoxically harbouring meaning that is greater than that of conceptual abstraction alone. Illuminating Breton’s poetic and allusive discourse, Poetics of the Sensible showcases his unique voice in French philosophy, phenomenology and the philosophy of religion and is essential reading for scholars and students alike.
You hold in your hands a sparkling masterpiece by a legendary master of Continental thought remarkably well-rendered into English. As soon as you catch your breath, wonder strikes yet again as you journey through the poetics of the sensible with Stanislas Breton as your guide. * William C. Hackett, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology, USA *
Breton's Neoplatonic and Scholastic background enables him to go beyond phenomenology in exploring the ontological and cosmological significance of the senses. The style of this contemplative essay, enriched by imaginative reading of Scripture, conveys the warmth and benevolence of one who always used both heart and head in his plucky "respondens dico" to the questions of the hour. He ends by inviting our senses to perceive traces of divine presence in icons, cathedrals, Kyoto gardens, and in the faces of a sufferer and of a child. * Joseph S. O'Leary, Former Roche Professor for Interreligious Dialogue, Nanzan University, Japan *
ISBN: 9781350386853
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
176 pages