Carolyn Bailey Gill, ed., Maurice Blanchot: The Demand of Writing Reviewed by

Philosophy in Review 17 (6):409-411 (1997)
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Abstract

This volume of essays is both a useful introduction to the work Maurice Blanchot and an advanced and interesting study of this work. Well-known themes of Blanchot's thought are addressed: 'death as non-dialectical other', 'conversation as a (non) meeting place', 'the absence of any present', 'the worklessness of the work' (which rewrites G.W.F. Hegel's 'work as sublation of contradiction', and 'the impossibility of any origin'. The book divides Blanchot's oeuvre into three periods: criticism, fiction, and a more recent period of hard-to-classify works.

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original Burke, Victoria (1997) "Carolyn Bailey Gill, ed., Maurice Blanchot: The Demand of Writing". Philosophy in Review 17():409-411

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Victoria I. Burke
Ryerson University

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