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Rootedness: The Ramifications of a Metaphor [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 23x16x2 mm, weight: 567 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Apr-2016
  • Izdevniecība: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022631765X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226317656
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  • Cena: 53,42 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 23x16x2 mm, weight: 567 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Apr-2016
  • Izdevniecība: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022631765X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226317656
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
People have long imagined themselves as rooted creatures, bound to the earth—and nations—from which they came. InRootedness, Christy Wampole looks toward philosophy, ecology, literature, history, and politics to demonstrate how the metaphor of the root—surfacing often in an unexpected variety of places, from the family tree to folk etymology to the language of exile—developed in twentieth-century Europe.

Wampole examines both the philosophical implications of this metaphor and its political evolution. From the root as home to the root as genealogical origin to the root as the past itself, rootedness has survived in part through its ability to subsume other compelling metaphors, such as the foundation, the source, and the seed. With a focus on this concept’s history in France and Germany, Wampole traces its influence in diverse areas such as the search for the mystical origins of words, land worship, and nationalist rhetoric, including the disturbing portrayal of the Jews as an unrooted, and thus unrighteous, people. Exploring the works of Martin Heidegger, Simone Weil, Jean-Paul Sartre, Paul Celan, and many more,Rootedness is a groundbreaking study of a figure of speech that has had wide-reaching—and at times dire—political and social consequences. 


Roots are good to think with—indeed most of us use them as a metaphor every day. A root can signify the hiddenness of our beginnings, or, in its bifurcating structure, the various possibilities in the life of an individual or a collective. This book looks at rootedness as a metaphor for the genealogical origins of people and their attachment to place—and how this metaphor transformed so rapidly in twentieth-century Europe. Christy Wampole’s case study is France, with its contradictory legacies of Enlightenment universalism, anti-Semitism, and colonialism. At one time, French nationalist rhetoric portrayed the Jews as unrooted and thus unrighteous people. After the two world wars, the root metaphor figured in the new French philosophy (notably Deleuze and Guattari). And recently, Caribbean thinkers in Haiti, Guadeloupe, and Martinique have debated whether their roots were in Africa, France, the Caribbean, or in some pan-national network that could not be identified on a map. Walpole argues that while the metaphor was perhaps once useful in the establishment of communities and identities, that usefulness has expired. The longer we remain attached to the figure of rootedness, the more discord it sows. Giving up on the metaphor of rootedness, Wampole urges, allows us to see at last that we are in fact unbound by the land we inhabit.
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(13)
1 Welcome to the Rhizosphere
14(24)
Some Thoughts on Metaphor
15(4)
Generation Radix
19(2)
Home Is Where the Root Is
21(3)
Jung and Bachelard Go Deep: The Root as Subconscious Image
24(8)
Radical Evil: Of Mandrakes and Wurzelmannchen
32(6)
2 Radical Poetry
38(37)
Ponge and the Plant's Immobility
39(4)
Into Thin Air: Celan's "Radix, Matrix"
43(7)
Guillevic's Radical Trying
50(16)
The Awkward Human: Levertov and Ecological Alienation
66(9)
3 Roots and Transcendence
75(36)
Verticality and the Root
78(6)
Claudel's Rooted Crucifix
84(8)
Valery and the Vegetal Brain
92(3)
Inversion and Conversion
95(5)
Monsieur Teste, Botanical Thinker
100(3)
Tournier and the Upending of Western Culture
103(8)
4 Saving Europe from Itself: Weil's Enracinement and Heidegger's Bodenstandigkeit
111(44)
Talk of Roots in the Air: La querelle du peuplier
112(15)
Weil's Fear of Abstraction
127(11)
Heidegger the Terroiriste
138(17)
5 Sartre, Phenomenology, and the Root
155(23)
The Nausea-Inducing Root of Being
156(9)
Sartre's Autobiographical Tree
165(6)
Phenomenology's Search for Ground
171(7)
6 Etymology and Essence: The Primeval Power of Word Roots
178(38)
The Etymological Obsession
180(15)
German Ideological Etymology
195(5)
Paulhan's Etymological Skepticism
200(3)
Derrida's Deracination of Language
203(7)
Blanchot and the Etymon's Danger
210(6)
7 From Rhizome to Vegetal Democracy
216(39)
The Cryptic Rhizome of Deleuze and Guattari
218(18)
The Postmodern Plantation
236(5)
Neo-Paganism and Plant Democracy
241(14)
Bibliography 255(14)
Index 269