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Cartesian Poetics

The Art of Thinking

Andrea Gadberry

$190.95

Hardback

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English
University of Chicago Press
20 October 2020
What is thinking? What does it feel like? What is it good for? Andrea Gadberry looks for answers to these questions in the philosophy of René Descartes and finds them in the philosopher’s implicit poetics. Gadberry argues that Descartes’s thought was crucially enabled by poetry and shows how markers of poetic genres from love lyric and elegy to the puzzling forms of the riddle and the anagram betray an impassioned negotiation with the difficulties of thought and its limits. Where others have seen Cartesian philosophy as a triumph of reason, Gadberry reveals that the philosopher accused of having “slashed poetry’s throat” instead enlisted poetic form to contain thought’s frustrations.

Gadberry’s approach to seventeenth-century writings poses questions urgent for the twenty-first. Bringing literature and philosophy into rich dialogue, Gadberry centers close reading as a method uniquely equipped to manage skepticism, tolerate critical ambivalence, and detect feeling in philosophy. Helping us read classic moments of philosophical argumentation in a new light, this elegant study also expands outward to redefine thinking in light of its poetic formations.

By:  
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   399g
ISBN:   9780226722979
ISBN 10:   022672297X
Series:   Thinking Literature
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Andrea Gadberry is assistant professor at New York University at the Gallatin School of Individualized Study and in the Department of Comparative Literature.

Reviews for Cartesian Poetics: The Art of Thinking

Gadberry offers a dazzling reinterpretation of Descartes's relation to poetry. Written in beautiful and witty prose, this book argues that Cartesian philosophy is underpinned, shaped, and, in important ways, determined by the pressures and forces of literary genre: poetry is a vital form of thinking that is in no way confined to literary texts.. . . . [An] excellent and evocative book. -- Timothy M. Harrison * Critical Inquiry * Gadberry's engaging book defends Descartes against the charge of being the evil genius of modernism. . . . What makes reading Gadberry's book a rewarding experience is not, as one might expect, a literary deconstruction of Descartes's text. . . It is rather the way in which, by bringing Descartes's carefully coded feelings to light, it humanizes both the philosopher and the twists and turns of thinking as such. -- Christopher Braider * French Studies * Cartesian Poetics is an original, hard-nosed, gorgeously written, and compelling book. For a book on the aesthetics of thinking, it is suitably beautiful and intelligent. . . . Gadberry's artful reconstruction and probing of Descartes's sentences reveal the poetry flowing beneath and within his philosophy. * Jonathan Kramnick, Yale University * Cartesian Poetics brilliantly integrates historical sensitivity and speculative boldness. Tracing a 'literary life of concepts' through the riddle, the love lyric, the elegy, and the anagram, Gadberry gives us a new history of Descartes's philosophical coming of age. Her nuanced close readings, which make dazzling use of wit as an engine of literary-critical investigation, awaken us to a conception of poetic form that lives in and between thoughts-that makes 'thinking,' in the largest sense, possible. * Gerard Passannante, University of Maryland, College Park *


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