Phenomenological Comparison: Pursuing Husserl’s “Time-consciousness” in Poems by Wang Wei, Paul Celan and Santoka Taneda

Comparative and Continental Philosophy 9 (3):241-259 (2017)
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Abstract

ABSTRACT“Time-consciousness” constitutes the core of Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology. Extending from a project of reviving the comparative method, we develop Husserl’s phenomenological analysis of time as a method of literary comparison. Three views of time set the stage: the quatrain “Luán’s Fall” by the eighth-century Chinese poet Wang Wei, a stanza from the poem “Etched off‌” by Paul Celan, the quintessential post-war poet in German language, and the haiku “Walking, on and on” by the Japanese itinerant monk and free-verse haiku pioneer Santoka Taneda. What makes these poems relevant is not merely their superficially shared theme of time, but an intrinsic affinity, manifested in different poetic “time-objects”, to the very notion of time-consciousness. Through poetic analysis in the context of Husserl’s philosophy of time-consciousness, these poetic experiences, embodied in a phenomenological concept of “walking,” emphasize time as being.

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Yiching Sheen
National Taiwan University

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Husserl's phenomenology.Dan Zahavi - 2003 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
Off the beaten track.Martin Heidegger - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Julian Young & Kenneth Haynes.
A Kant Dictionary.Howard Caygill (ed.) - 1995 - Wiley-Blackwell.

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