"New human possibilities" in Patočka's philosophy of literature
This article considers Patočka's phenomenological account of literature in "The Writer's Concern" to defend the idea that literary writing offers a distinctive philosophical contribution. In this text, Patočka gives the writer a special claim on the activity of world disclosure and suggests that literature may offer a glimpse out of the techno-scientific framework that dominates contemporary life. I examine both science and literature as modes of relating to the world, raising questions about the distinctiveness of each and their use of the written word. Finally, I locate the philosophical advantage of literary writing in Patočka's dual claims about literature: that it offers "an individual capturing of life's meaning" and that it presents "the world" as an "undivided" whole.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | phenomenology, phenomenology of art, phenomenology of literature, philosophy of literature, literary criticism, literary theory, literature and literary theory, philosophy |
Date Deposited | 15 May 2025 14:32 |
Last Modified | 31 May 2025 00:28 |