Spirit Pathos and Liberation

Spirit  Pathos and Liberation
Author: Samuel Solivan
Publsiher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 166
Release: 1998-11-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1850759421

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The growth of the Pentecostal movement is often most evident among the poor and disenfranchised of society, as, for example, among the Hispanic-American community. As this community continues to develop, will Pentecostal theology be able to incorporate into its hermeneutics those issues that especially concern it? Solivan looks at relevant issues to this debate from a Hispanic-American perspective, presenting an overview of Hispanic diversity, and its common roots and struggles. He talks of four critical issues in Hispanic theology (religious experience, suffering, the work of the Holy Spirit and the importance of language and culture) and other issues including acculturation and assimilation. He shows how a community's suffering and oppression can be transformed by the Holy Spirit into a liberating life, full of hope and promise.

From Yugoslav Praxis to Global Pathos

From Yugoslav Praxis to Global Pathos
Author: William L. McBride
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2001
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0742512258

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McBride (philosophy, Purdue U.) traces the history of the Yugoslav philosophers known as the Praxis Group who sought a third approach to society and government during the Cold War. He describes briefly their journal Praxis, and notes that the group had considerable influence beyond its small number and especially made hard line Soviet ideologues nervous. c. Book News Inc.

The Pathos of the Real

The Pathos of the Real
Author: Robert Buch
Publsiher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2010-12-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780801899270

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This book is about the ambition, in a set of paradigmatic writers of the twentieth century, to simultaneously enlist and break the spell of the real—their fascination with the spectacle of violence and suffering—and the difficulties involved in capturing this kind of excess by aesthetic means. The works at the center of this study—by Franz Kafka, Georges Bataille, Claude Simon, Peter Weiss, and Heiner Müller—zero in on scenes of agony, destruction, and death with an astonishing degree of precision and detail. The strange and troubling nature of the appeal engendered by these sights is the subject of The Pathos of the Real. Robert Buch shows that the spectacles of suffering conjured up in these texts are deeply ambivalent, available neither to cathartic relief nor to the sentiment of compassion. What prevails instead is a peculiar coincidence of opposites: exaltation and resignation; disfiguration and transfiguration; agitation and paralysis. Featuring the experiences of violent excess in strongly visual and often in expressly pictorial terms, the works expose the nexus between violence and the image in twentieth-century aesthetics. Buch explores this tension between visual and verbal representation by drawing on the rhetorical notion of pathos as both insurmountable suffering and codified affect and the psychoanalytic notion of the real, that is, the disruption of the symbolic order. In dialogue with a diverse group of thinkers, from Erich Auerbach and Aby Warburg to Alain Badiou and Jacques Lacan, The Pathos of the Real advances an innovative new framework for rethinking the aesthetics of violence in the twentieth century.

Pathos and Anti Pathos

Pathos and Anti Pathos
Author: Tom Vanassche
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 390
Release: 2022-12-31
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9783110758580

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Scholarship often presumes that texts written about the Shoah, either by those directly involved in it or those writing its history, must always bear witness to the affective aftermath of the event, the lingering emotional effects of suffering. Drawing on the History of Emotions and on trauma theory, this monograph offers a critical study of the ambivalent attributions and expressions of emotion and “emotionlessness” in the literature and historiography of the Shoah. It addresses three phenomena: the metaphorical discourses by which emotionality and the purported lack thereof are attributed to victims and to perpetrators; the rhetoric of affective self-control and of affective distancing in fiction, testimony and historiography; and the poetics of empathy and the status of emotionality in discourses on the Shoah. Through a close analysis of a broad corpus centred around the work of W. G. Sebald, Dieter Schlesak, Ruth Klüger and Raul Hilberg, the book critically contextualises emotionality and its attributions in the post-war era, when a scepticism of pathos coincided with demands for factual rigidity. Ultimately, it invites the reader to reflect on their own affective stances towards history and its commemoration in the twenty-first century.

Pathos

Pathos
Author: Traumear
Publsiher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2017-01-26
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781326927998

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The pathos of modern life and beyond, the pain due to modern existence - described in several of its guises and disguises. These are interesting, often colourful stories that allow us to explore our present state of being.

Political Pathos

Political Pathos
Author: Madeson Penny
Publsiher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 80
Release: 2010-10-14
Genre: Humor
ISBN: 9781453584644

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Democrats. Republicans. Government. Greedy corporate executives. No one is off limits when it comes to Madesons sharp yet fun poetic pokes. Though insults and sarcasm abound, there is an equal abundance of truth and raw candor that cut to the core problems facing America reckless government, failed economic policies, greedy capitalists and a fundamentally different Executive Branch. Meet your favorite new poetic Roastmaster. Meet Madeson Penny.

The Pathos of Distance

The Pathos of Distance
Author: Jean-Michel Rabaté
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2016-04-21
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781501307973

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Jean-Michel Rabaté uses Nietzsche's image of a “pathos of distance,” the notion that values are created by a few gifted and lofty individuals, as the basis for a wide-ranging investigation into the ethics of the moderns. Revealing overlooked connections between Nietzsche's and Benjamin's ideas of history and ethics, Rabaté provides an original genealogy for modernist thought, moving through figures and moments as varied as Yeats and the birth of Irish Modernism, the ethics of courage in Virginia Woolf, Rilke, Apollinaire, and others in 1910, T. S. Eliot's post-war despair, Jean Cocteau's formidable selfmythology in his first film The Blood of a Poet, Siri Hustvedt's novel of American trauma, and J. M. Coetzee's dystopia portraying an affectless future haunted by a messianic promise.

Shakespeare s Sublime Pathos

Shakespeare s Sublime Pathos
Author: Jonathan P. A. Sell
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 175
Release: 2021-07-29
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9781000407877

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Shakespeare’s Sublime Pathos: Person, Audience, Language breaks new ground in providing a sustained, demystifying treatment of its subject and looking for answers to basic questions regarding the creation, experience, aesthetics and philosophy of Shakespearean sublimity. More specifically, it explores how Shakespeare generates experiences of sublime pathos, for which audiences have been prepared by the sublime ethos described in the companion volume, Shakespeare’s Sublime Ethos. To do so, it examines Shakespeare’s model of mutualistic character, in which "entangled" language brokers a psychic communion between fictive persons and real-life audiences and readers. In the process, Sublime Critical platitudes regarding Shakespeare’s liberating ambiguity and invention of the human are challenged, while the sympathetic imagination is reinstated as the linchpin of the playwright’s sublime effects. As the argument develops, the Shakespearean sublime emerges as an emotional state of vulnerable exhilaration leading to an ethically uplifting openness towards others and an epistemologically bracing awareness of human unknowability. Taken together, Shakespeare’s Sublime Pathos and Shakespeare’s Sublime Ethos show how Shakespearean drama integrates matter and spirit on hierarchical planes of cognition and argue that, ultimately, his is an immanent sublimity of the here-and-now enfolding a transcendence which may be imagined, simulated or evoked, but never achieved.