Ruins; or the Being of Time as History in ...
Type de document :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
DOI :
Titre :
Ruins; or the Being of Time as History in Elizabeth Bowen’s The Heat of the Day
Auteur(s) :
Dutoit, Thomas [Auteur]
Centre d'Études en Civilisations, Langues et Lettres Étrangères - ULR 4074 [CECILLE]
Centre d'Études en Civilisations, Langues et Lettres Étrangères - ULR 4074 [CECILLE]
Titre de la revue :
Études britanniques contemporaines - Revue de la Société dʼétudes anglaises contemporaines
Ruins. Colloque de la SEAC, Londres, novembre 2011
Ruins. Colloque de la SEAC, Londres, novembre 2011
Pagination :
73-94
Éditeur :
Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée
Date de publication :
2012-12-31
ISSN :
1168-4917
Mot(s)-clé(s) en anglais :
M. Heidegger
J. Derrida
E. Bowen
The Heat of the Day
Dasein
destruction
history
origins
possibility
ruins
J. Derrida
E. Bowen
The Heat of the Day
Dasein
destruction
history
origins
possibility
ruins
Discipline(s) HAL :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Littératures
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Linguistique
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Sciences de l'information et de la communication
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Linguistique
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Sciences de l'information et de la communication
Résumé en anglais : [en]
In 1926–27, in his work Being and Time (Sein und Zeit), Martin Heidegger sought to ‘destroy’ the metaphysics of presence. To destroy, which meant to solicit, to shake, to destabilize, to bring out the ruins and remains ...
Lire la suite >In 1926–27, in his work Being and Time (Sein und Zeit), Martin Heidegger sought to ‘destroy’ the metaphysics of presence. To destroy, which meant to solicit, to shake, to destabilize, to bring out the ruins and remains inherent in presence, was for Heidegger, if not to surpass metaphysics and its privilege of presence, to attest another mode of thinking time and history. This other way of thinking was to think Being (Sein), the holding-together of life (Zusammenhang des Lebens), and community, according to an ‘always already’ and ‘always not yet’. The ‘destruction of presence’ sought precisely to show that the rationalistic imposition of presence was disastrous. In his as yet unpublished course from 1964, entitled ‘Heidegger: la question de l’Être et l’histoire’, Jacques Derrida interrogates at length Heidegger’s project, writing for example that ‘Sein und Zeit commence donc à ébranler, à solliciter l’époque qui dissimule l’histoire de l’être sous l’histoire de l’étantité determine comme présentité/ Being and Time begins, therefore, to shake, to unsettle, the epoch that dissimulates the history of Being beneath the history of beingness determined as present-ness’. Derrida, in this course and henceforth with ever-greater acuity and force, laid out what this other way of thinking might be, and it acknowledges and welcomes the place of the ruin, the remainder, well-nigh converting it into a sustainable resource, in the name of thinking otherwise what life and community are, despite the hegemony of a metaphysics of presence. I would like to take the de(con)struction of presence—not at all a ruin-causing event in twentieth-century thought, on the contrary—as a point of departure for reading a novel devoted to the remanence of ruins in London, Elizabeth Bowen’s The Heat of the Day (1949). Commanded by a representation of the Blitz, and by a representation of London as a presence whose modality is the past of the future, this novel is a striking example of a ‘deconstruction of present exhaustion and of past master discourses’.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >In 1926–27, in his work Being and Time (Sein und Zeit), Martin Heidegger sought to ‘destroy’ the metaphysics of presence. To destroy, which meant to solicit, to shake, to destabilize, to bring out the ruins and remains inherent in presence, was for Heidegger, if not to surpass metaphysics and its privilege of presence, to attest another mode of thinking time and history. This other way of thinking was to think Being (Sein), the holding-together of life (Zusammenhang des Lebens), and community, according to an ‘always already’ and ‘always not yet’. The ‘destruction of presence’ sought precisely to show that the rationalistic imposition of presence was disastrous. In his as yet unpublished course from 1964, entitled ‘Heidegger: la question de l’Être et l’histoire’, Jacques Derrida interrogates at length Heidegger’s project, writing for example that ‘Sein und Zeit commence donc à ébranler, à solliciter l’époque qui dissimule l’histoire de l’être sous l’histoire de l’étantité determine comme présentité/ Being and Time begins, therefore, to shake, to unsettle, the epoch that dissimulates the history of Being beneath the history of beingness determined as present-ness’. Derrida, in this course and henceforth with ever-greater acuity and force, laid out what this other way of thinking might be, and it acknowledges and welcomes the place of the ruin, the remainder, well-nigh converting it into a sustainable resource, in the name of thinking otherwise what life and community are, despite the hegemony of a metaphysics of presence. I would like to take the de(con)struction of presence—not at all a ruin-causing event in twentieth-century thought, on the contrary—as a point of departure for reading a novel devoted to the remanence of ruins in London, Elizabeth Bowen’s The Heat of the Day (1949). Commanded by a representation of the Blitz, and by a representation of London as a presence whose modality is the past of the future, this novel is a striking example of a ‘deconstruction of present exhaustion and of past master discourses’.Lire moins >
Langue :
Anglais
Vulgarisation :
Non
Commentaire :
The file available here is a pre-publication version of the published essay.
Source :
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