
This volume explores how poets use different kinds of formal experimentation to change the way we think, and to allow us to try out new ways of perceiving existence and positioning ourselves within the world. Yves Bonnefoy and Jean-Luc Nancy: Ontological Performance examines the affinities that exist between Bonnefoy's poetry and Nancy's philosophy. It analyses how Bonnefoy experiments with the poem's act of address, its material disposition, and sonorous performance. It scrutinises how he foregrounds the bodily and material forces that are at play within language in order to makes us feel the diverse worldly forces that are active within us and to make us perceive our own human existence in more interconnected ways. Exploring how Bonnefoy and Nancy share the desire to resist detached ways of perceiving existence, this book analyses how they present interaction as the generative dynamic that drives all existence and use the text's resonant play to make us aware of how all bodies—human, material, or poetic—emerge from a complex interplay of worldly forces.
This volume investigates the intersection of Yves Bonnefoy's poetic practice and Jean-Luc Nancy's philosophical framework to determine how formal experimentation functions as an ontological performance. Emily McLaughlin, an academic researcher, utilizes a comparative analysis of Bonnefoy’s verse and Nancy’s theoretical writings to argue that both figures reject detached perception. The work posits that language serves as a site where bodily and material forces interact, ultimately shaping how human existence is understood within a broader, interconnected world.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of modern French literature and continental philosophy view this text as a specialized study of the relationship between poetic form and ontological inquiry. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for an audience already familiar with the primary works of Bonnefoy and Nancy.
Page Count:
192
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
019258944X
ISBN-13:
9780192589446
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