Experience and History

Phenomenological Perspectives on the Historical World

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Oxford University Press


Paru le : 2014-07-01



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Description
David Carr outlines a distinctively phenomenological approach to history. Rather than asking what history is or how we know history, a phenomenology of history inquires into history as a phenomenon and into the experience of the historical. How does history present itself to us, how does it enter our lives, and what are the forms of experience in which it does so? History is usually associated with social existence and its past, and so Carr probes the experience of the social world and of its temporality. Experience in this context connotes not just observation but also involvement and interaction: We experience history not just in the social world around us but also in our own engagement with it. For several decades, philosophers' reflections on history have been dominated by two themes: representation and memory. Each is conceived as a relation to the past: representation can be of the past, and memory is by its nature of the past. On both of these accounts, history is separated by a gap from what it seeks to find or wants to know, and its activity is seen by philosophers as that of bridging this gap. This constitutes the problem to which the philosophy of history addresses itself: how does history bridge the gap which separates it from its object, the past? It is against this background that a phenomenological approach, based on the concept of experience, can be proposed as a means of solving this problem-or at least addressing it in a way that takes us beyond the notion of a gap between present and past.
Pages
288 pages
Collection
n.c
Parution
2014-07-01
Marque
Oxford University Press
EAN papier
9780199377657
EAN PDF
9780199377664

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0
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0
Taille du fichier
4127 Ko
Prix
45,23 €

David Carr is Charles Howard Candler Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Emory University and Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research. He is also the author of The Paradox of Subjectivity: The Self in the Transcendental Tradition (OUP, 1999), Interpreting Husserl: Critical and Comparative Studies (1987), Time, Narrative, and History (1986), and Phenomenology and the Problem of History: A Study of Husserl's Transcendental Philosophy (1974).

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