Imperfection and Defeat

Virgil Nemoianu

Imperfection and Defeat

The Role of Aesthetic Imagination in Human Society

Literature is defined in a challenging way as the "science" of imperfection and defeat, or else as a type of discourse that deals with defeat, loss, uncertainty in social life, by contrast with virtually all disciplines (hard sciences or social sciences) that affirm certainties and wish to convince us of truths. If in real history most constructive attempts end up in failure, it follows that we ought to have also a field of research that examines this diversity of failures and disappointments, as well as the alternative options to historical evolution and progress. Thus literature serves an indispensable role: that of gleaning the abundance of past existence, the gratuitous and the rejected being placed here on an equal level with the useful and the successful.This provocative and unusual approach is illustrated in chapters that deal with the dialectics between literary writing and such fields as historical writing, or religious discourses, and is also illustrated by the socio-historical development of East-Central Europe.
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Author

Virgil Nemoianu

Virgil Nemoianu is William J. Byron Distinguished Professor of Literature and Ordinary Professor of Philosophy at the Catholic University of America in Washington DC. He is the author and editor of over 700 articles, reviews, and columns on three continents, and over 15 books including The Taming of Romanticism (Harvard UP, 1985), The Theory of the Secondary (Johns Hopkins UP, 1989) and The Triumph of Imperfection (Univ. S. Carolina UP, 2005).

Title
Imperfection and Defeat
Subtitle
The Role of Aesthetic Imagination in Human Society
Author
Price
€ 120,00
ISBN
9786155211058
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
154
Language
English
Publication date
Categories
Art and Material Cultures
Philosophy and Ethics
Discipline
Academic - Social Sciences
Imprint
Also available as
Hardback - € 120,00
Table of Contents
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Introduction Chapter One: A Philosophical Foundation Chapter Two: The Dialectic of Literature and Religion Chapter Three: The Dialectic of Literature and History Bibliography Chapter Four: East/Central Europe as a Confirmatory Case Study Bibliography Chapter Five: Literature as Allegory of Human Persecution and Survival Index