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Full Description
Reflections on the enigma and secret of "literature."
A Voice from Elsewhere represents one of Maurice Blanchot's most important reflections on the enigma and secret of "literature." The essays here bear down on the necessity and impossibility of witnessing what literature transmits, and-like Beckett and Kafka-on what one might call the "default" of language, the tenuous border that binds writing and silence to each other. In addition to considerations of René Char, Paul Celan, and Michel Foucault, Blanchot offers a sustained encounter with the poems of Louis-René des Forêts and, throughout, a unique and important concentration on music-on the lyre and the lyric, meter and measure-which poetry in particular brings before us.
Contents
Translator's Note
Anacrusis: On the Poems of Louis-René des Forêts
A Voice from Elsewhere
The White The Black
Anacrusis
The Beast of Lascaux
The Last to Speak
Michel Foucault as I Imagine Him
A Man in Danger
Farewell to Structuralism
The Demand for Discontinuity
Knowledge, Power, Truth?
From Subjection to Subject
The Innermost Conviction
Who Is Me Today?
Society of Blood, Society of Knowledge
Deadly Racism
The Determination to Talk about Sex
Oh My Friends