Available Formats
The Poetics of the Sensible
By (Author) Stanislas Breton
Translated by Sarah Horton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
8th February 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Phenomenology and Existentialism
Theology
Philosophy of language
210
Hardback
176
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
In the first English language translation of this classic late 20th-century text within French Catholic thought, Poetics of the Sensible brings together insights from Neoplatonism and phenomenology with a distinctive and innovative approach. Taking a stance within the generative conception of human language represented by continental thinkers such as Humboldt and Herder and powerfully articulated today by Charles Taylor, Stanislas Breton expands the sense of the poeticthe constructive meaning-bearing capacity that is a core characteristic of humanityto include the body and its senses phenomenologically intertwined with the world. Defying Heideggers prohibition on the question of God alongside contemporary thinkers such as Jean-Luc Marion, Jean-Louis Chrtien and Emmanuel Falque, he boldly writes of God, of the angel, of the icon, and of prayer in a refusal to bracket his religious faith. Against a Neoplatonic backdrop, Breton promotes the dense material dimensions of embodied signification as paradoxically harbouring meaning that is greater than that of conceptual abstraction alone. Illuminating Bretons poetic and allusive discourse, Poetics of the Sensible showcases his unique voice in French philosophy, phenomenology and the philosophy of religion and is essential reading for scholars and students alike.
Stanislas Breton was a French theologian and philosopher. He taught at the cole Normale Suprieure in Paris, the Catholic University of Paris and the Catholic University of Lyon, France. Sarah Horton is Part-Time Faculty in Philosophy at Youngstown State University, USA.