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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20140331T140000
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SUMMARY:A Poetics of Limit: Celan\, Mallarmé\, and Heidegger
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LOCATION:Cambridge\, United States
DESCRIPTION:"A Poetics of Limit: Celan\, Mallarm&eacute\;\, and Heidegger." David Nowell-Smith (University of East Anglia)<br>Germanic Circle Colloquium<br>Date: Monday\, March 31\, 2014\, 6:00pm to 8:00pm<br>Location: Harvard\, Nebel Room\, Barker 365<br> <br>This paper sketches out a 'poetics of limit' through close readings of St&eacute\;phane Mallarm&eacute\; and Paul Celan\, read alongside Martin Heidegger. It probes in particular two &lsquo\;limits&rsquo\; operating in Heidegger's thought: firstly\, the relation between &lsquo\;world&rsquo\; and &lsquo\;earth&rsquo\; as depicted in &lsquo\;The Origin of the Work of Art&rsquo\;\, which he characterises as a &lsquo\;contest between measure and limit&rsquo\;\; secondly\, the liminal &lsquo\;peal of stillness&rsquo\; through which an originary logos first enters verbal articulation. Both Mallarm&eacute\; and Celan attend to the limits of their verbal art--prosodic and ethical--open on to excess such that poetry becomes a medium for speculative thinking\; it is such a thinking that this paper ultimately seeks to trace.<br><br>David Nowell Smith is Lecturer in Literature at the University of East Anglia\, where he directs the UEA Poetics Project. His first book was <em>Sounding/Silence: Martin Heidegger at the Limits of Poetics</em> (Fordham UP\, 2013)\; <em>The Dimension of Voice</em> will appear next year with Palgrave. He is editor of the online poetics journal <em>Thinking Verse</em> (<a target="_blank">www.thinkingverse.com</a>) and co-editor (with Abigail Lang) of <em>Modernist Legacies: Trends and Faultlines in British Poetry Today </em>(Palgrave\, 2014 forthcoming).\n
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