The Subject as Action: Transformation and Totality in Narrative Aesthetics

(1993)
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Abstract

Observing a vital complementarity between the narrative and the aesthetic (two realms often alienated from each other), Singer argues for the relevance of narrative logic to the critique of post-Cartesian subjectivity. Reciprocally, he demonstrates the relevance of rational norms of human agency to the study of narrative art. On one hand, Singer wants to salvage the critique of the subject from the metaphysical abstraction of idealist philosophies.

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Alan Singer
Appalachian State University

Citations of this work

Tyranny, Self, and Genre in Pliny's Letter 5.8.Holly Haynes - 2019 - Classical Antiquity 38 (1):58-90.

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