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  • Gemünden, Gerd, 1959-

    Edité par New York: PLang, 1990, 1990

    Vendeur : Steven Wolfe Books, Newton Centre, MA, Etats-Unis

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    Gemünden, Gerd, 1959-. Die hermeneutische Wende: Disziplin und Sprachlosigkeit nach 1800. New York: PLang, 1990, vi, 194pp., very good hardcover with printed covers. American university studies. Series III, Comparative literature, vol. 30. - INCLUDES discussion of Scheliermacher, Frankenstein, Kaspar Hauser, Pierre Rivière, Woyzeck. - The Hermeneutic Turn analyzes the importance of Schleiermacher s hermeneutics for the disciplines of medicine, law, and pedagogy. Focusing on the treatment of speechlessness in early 19th century French, German and English literary and non-literary texts, it critically examines how the concept of interpretation undergoes a decisive epistemological turn after 1800. The hermeneutic program of making texts speak is shown to actually produce the speechlessness it set out to vanquish. "Gerd Gemündens lucid study of nineteenth-century "monsters" and "criminals" examines the monstrosity of a discourse that constructs its subjects only to imprison them. A clearheaded analysis of the will to know, combining major tenets of post-structuralism." (Karla L Schultz University of Oregon). In this stimulating and lucidly argued book, Gerd Gemünden provides nothing less than a genealogy of hermeneutics. For as he suggests, the rise of hermeneutics as a discipline - that is, as a method of interpretation taking different but related forms in modem philology, medicine, psychiatry, penology, etc. - requires that individuals enter language on terms that enable it to assimilate them to its own norms. In a series of penetrating studies, Gemünden explores the consequences of this development as they are represented in the cases of Kaspar Hauser, Pierre Rivière, Frankenstein, and Woyzeck. He arrives at provocative conclusions that will interest anyone concerned with modem literature and culture. (Steven Rendait University of Oregon). Gerd Gemünden currently is Assistant Professor of German and Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College. He previously served as Assistant Professor in the Department of Foreign Languages at Seattle University. He has authored articles on hermeneutics and deconstruction and reading after Foucault. 9780820411439 ISBN 0820411434.