Inexistent Night (with Yasunari Kawabata)

Comparative and Continental Philosophy 11 (2):98-109 (2019)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

This piece theorizes the myriad strange possibilities of “the inexistent night” – that is, a minor temporal-existential break in the after-dark that nevertheless enables both disastrous and euphoric transformations to take hold. To illustrate this subtle turn, the focus rests upon a close analysis of a text by the twentieth-century, avant-garde, Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata titled House of the Sleeping Beauties. This is a minimalist tale of enigmatic encounters in which characters embody different cyclical moods relating night to anonymity, solitude, and impermanence. In the final stride, an entire conceptual edifice of the inexistent unfolds – amid radical disorientations of identity, desire, movement, and sensation – combining the architectonics of ghostliness with the atmospherics of shadow to suggest a more cryptic world beyond all existential centers.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,610

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Aquinas on Mental Being.Gabriele Galluzzo - 2010 - Quaestio 10:83-97.
Prisoners of the inexistent Other.Jelica Sumic-Riha - 2007 - Filozofski Vestnik 28 (1):81 - +.
a Night in Februrary, A Night in May.Józef Hen - 2001 - Dialogue and Universalism 11 (9-10):219-224.
Day and night intervals and the distribution of practice.J. B. Spight - 1928 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 11 (5):397.
On the Night of the Elemental Imaginary.Susanna Lindberg - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (2):157-180.
From Night to Day: Nihilism and the Living Dead.John Marmysz - 1996 - Film & Philosophy (Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts) 3:138-143.
The loss of night vision: clinical manifestations in man and animals.H. Ripps & G. A. Fishman - 1990 - In R. F. Hess, L. T. Sharpe & K. Nordby (eds.), Night Vision: Basic, Clinical and Applied Aspects. Cambridge University Press. pp. 417--450.

Analytics

Added to PP
2019-05-20

Downloads
21 (#732,808)

6 months
7 (#419,303)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references