Book contents
- Wittgenstein and Literary Studies
- Cambridge Studies in Literature and Philosophy
- Wittgenstein and Literary Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations of Wittgenstein’s Major Works
- Introduction
- 1 Writing after Wittgenstein
- 2 A Wittgensteinian Phenomenology of Criticism
- 3 Appreciating Material
- 4 A Vision of Language for Literary Historians
- 5 Wittgenstein and the Prospects for a Contemporary Literary Humanism
- 6 Storied Thoughts
- 7 Wittgenstein and Lyric
- 8 Life, Logic, Style
- 9 Wittgenstein’s Apocalyptic Subjectivity
- Index
9 - Wittgenstein’s Apocalyptic Subjectivity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2022
- Wittgenstein and Literary Studies
- Cambridge Studies in Literature and Philosophy
- Wittgenstein and Literary Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations of Wittgenstein’s Major Works
- Introduction
- 1 Writing after Wittgenstein
- 2 A Wittgensteinian Phenomenology of Criticism
- 3 Appreciating Material
- 4 A Vision of Language for Literary Historians
- 5 Wittgenstein and the Prospects for a Contemporary Literary Humanism
- 6 Storied Thoughts
- 7 Wittgenstein and Lyric
- 8 Life, Logic, Style
- 9 Wittgenstein’s Apocalyptic Subjectivity
- Index
Summary
This chapter moves through three clear stages. First, the initial sections highlight some of the ways that Wittgenstein has been misread by thinkers working in the tradition of continental philosophy and critical theory (including Badiou, Deleuze, and Marcuse); and, exposing some of these misreadings, it makes the case for grasping Wittgenstein not simply a modernist philosopher, but, more specifically, as an exponent of (what the chapter terms) philosophical modernism. Second, the chapter tarries with a number of Wittgenstein’s controversial remarks on the atomic bomb and (what he calls) the “apocalyptic view of the world,” and it brings these remarks into dialogue with the work of a number of other literary and philosophical figures, including Gertrude Stein, Günther Anders, and Theodor Adorno. Third, and finally, although Wittgenstein’s remarks on apocalypse appear in his private, postwar notebooks, they nevertheless provide us with a crucial link to his later philosophy, specifically Philosophical Investigations and this is what I turn to in the last sections of the chapter. In the Investigations, it is not simply the language of the book that we might describe as apocalyptic, but also, and more importantly, the fundamental conception of philosophy that we find therein. This returns us to the view of philosophical modernism previously outlined.
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- Wittgenstein and Literary Studies , pp. 194 - 213Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023