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The Death of Empedocles: A Mourning-Play (SUNY series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy)

Product ID : 43921298


Galleon Product ID 43921298
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About The Death Of Empedocles: A Mourning-Play

The definitive scholarly edition and new translation of all three versions of Hölderlin’s poem, The Death of Empedocles, and his related theoretical essays.On the eve of his final odes and hymns, Friedrich Hölderlin composed three versions of a dramatic poem on the suicide of the early Greek thinker, Empedocles of Acragas. This book offers the first complete translation of the three versions, along with translations of Hölderlin’s essays on the theory of tragedy. David Farrell Krell gives readers a brief chronology of Hölderlin’s life, an introduction to the life and thought of Empedocles—including Hölderlin’s Empedocles—detailed explanatory notes, and an analysis of the play and the theoretical essays, allowing for a full appreciation of this classic of world literature and philosophy.“Krell has not only admirably translated the sense of the original—his knowledge of German is obviously first-rate, and he has a sovereign understanding of the philosophical currents of Hölderlin’s time—but also generally maintained the meter … Even the reader who knows German will want to consult this fine piece of scholarship.” — CHOICE“It is hardly surprising that this book is a masterly achievement that will undoubtedly have an enormous impact on the study of Hölderlin’s work by Anglophone philosophers and literary theorists. The detailed accounts of Hölderlin’s life and works and of the circumstances surrounding the project of The Death of Empedocles are thorough and accurate and are presented in a manner that is enlivening and even—in the most positive sense—provocative. There is no philosopher today who is more knowledgeable about Hölderlin than David Krell.” — John Sallis, author of The Gathering of Reason, Second Edition“The importance of Friedrich Hölderlin’s literary writings and philosophical prose for readers from Hegel and Schelling to Heidegger, Benjamin, Adorno, de Man, and beyond cannot be overstated, and Hölderli