name index3a978-94-007...name index the act of reading, 167, 178, 207–208, 307 adam, 23–27, 171,...
TRANSCRIPT
N A M E I N D E X
The Act of Reading, 167, 178, 207–208, 307Adam, 23–27, 171, 174Adela, 334–337The Adoration of the Lamb, 325–326Adrift, 279–280Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 156, 208Aeschylus, 33–36, 40–41After the Theatre, 243Agamben, G., 5, 12Agamemnon, 33, 36–39, 41Age of the Reason, 321Allison, J., 218All Souls Night, 220Al Quaeda, 291The Ambassadors, 159, 161The American Journal of Semiotics, 88–89Among School Children, 221The Analysis of Passive Synthesis, 261, 266Anchor Bible Dictionary, 198Angelico, F., 10Angelus Novus, 6, 12Aniuta, 286, 296Antigone, 33Antigones, 55, 129Antonio, 12, 251Apollo, 33, 35–39, 75–76Appadurai, A., 5, 12Aristotle, 16, 19, 22, 36, 41, 71, 73, 149–150Arthur, 66, 130, 171, 177, 183Art and Space, 336Assinghams, F., 156–157Athena, 33, 35, 37–40Augustias, 334Autor, 335
Babylon Revisited, 97–98, 100–102Backus, J., 201–202Baglioni, 168, 170–172, 174, 178–179Baisao, 181, 186Baker, S., 228, 233Bakker, E., 79
Barrett, W., 23–27Barrow, J., 10, 14Barthelme, F., 283Barthes, R., 81–84, 87–90, 141, 150Basho, M., 258, 260–261, 263–273Basho Shichibu-shu, 258, 260, 264, 273Basic Problems of Phenomenology, 330Baudelaire, C., 5, 12Beagle voyage, 316Beatrice, 168–179Being in Time, 331Being and Time, 72, 203, 206, 330–331, 336Bell, M., 68, 170, 178Belonging together inseparably, 170Belsey, C., 88–89Ben, 197–198, 207Benjamin, W., 3–6, 11–12, 198, 202Benjy, 193–194, 196, 198–206, 208Bensick, C. M., 170–171, 173, 178Bergson, H., 263–264Bernarda, 334–336Bernstein, C., 7, 12Beyond the Pleasure Principle, 205, 208The Birthmark, 167The Birth of Tragedy, 18, 22, 41, 67,
129–130Blackburn, S., 34, 40The Blithedale Romance, 176–177Boncho, 264–268, 270–271Bonnefoy, Y., 11Booth, W., 205–208Borges, J. L., 183Boughton, G., 223–224, 226–230Boughton, J., 223–230Bournonville, A., 275, 280Bouvard and Pécuche, 89Brand, 249Brand, E., 168, 171, 174Brée, G., 150, 319, 322, 324,
326–327Bristow, E., 250, 253
339
A.-T. Tymieniecka (ed.), Analecta Husserliana CIX, 339–345.DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-0773-3, C© Springer Science+Business Media, B.V. 2011
340 N A M E I N D E X
Brooks, C., 24, 28Brown, G., 174, 177–179Brown, T., 214, 218, 220Buber, M., 187, 236–237
Cabuche, 120–122, 124, 126Caddy, 198, 200–203, 207Calvin, 232Cambridge University, 294Camille, 112Campbell, J., 275, 279–280Camus, A., 133–152, 225, 299, 319–327Camy-Lamotte, 121–122Caolte, 217Captain Cook, 187Cathleen ni Houlihan, 214The Celtic Twilight, 216, 218, 220Cézanne, P., 10, 303, 307Chad, 159–160, 162Chater, N., 332Chekhov, A., 243–253Chinseki, 258A Christmas Carol, 279Churchill, W., 17Civitas Dei, 134, 152Clamence, J. -B., 325–326Clara, 58–59, 64, 293–294Clarke, A. C., 183Clytemnestra, 35, 37, 39–40Coale, S. C., 172–173, 179Collins, J., 248A Comedy in Four Acts, 247–248The Company We Keep, 205, 207Compson, B., 194Compson family, 193–194, 196, 198–199,
202–203, 207Conditions de lumière, 9, 13Confessions, 99–101, 149, 151, 260Cooper, J. G., 310, 317Copernican revolution, 67, 120Cranly, 90Crisis of European Science, 176, 179, 215,
218, 311The Crisis of European Sciences and
Transcendental Phenomenology, 176, 179,215, 311
Crofton, 86, 92Cuchulain, 217Cummings, E. E., 10, 14
Dadlez, E., 36, 41Danila, 275–280Dans une coupe en verre, 9, 13Danto, A., 66, 130, 300Dark Star Safari, 181, 183–184, 190–191Darwin, C., 316, 318David, A. P., 79Da Vinci, L., 19Davis, J., 198, 201–202de Balzac, H., 82de Beauvoir, S., 300, 322Dedalus, S., 90, 280de l’Aubépine, M., 175–176Della, 228–229, 232Demastes, W. W., 336de Maupassant, G., 248, 263Denizet, 121–122Desdemona, 105de Waelhens, A., 301, 308Dickinson, E., 7Dictionarium Polygraphicum, 10, 14Die Stellung des Menschen im Kosmos, 236Digby, E., 186Dilsey, 194–197, 206–207Dionysus, 36Donatello, 177The Double Vision of Michael Robartes, 221Dr. Dorn, 243–245, 249, 252Dreyfus, H., 331Drummond, J., 312, 317Dryden, 225Dubliners, 81Dumas, A., 248Durfee, H., 322, 327Dworkin, R., 154
Eagleton, T., 66–67, 129, 214Effy, 275, 277–279Elam, K., 334, 337Élégie L apostrophe E.C., 8, 13Eliade, M., 75, 130Eliot, T. S., 12, 27, 29, 99–100, 102, 272Elli, 294–295Ellmann, R., 215, 220El Romano, P., 334Emerson, R. W., 284, 296Emery, 220The Emigrants, 293, 295, 297End of the Modern World, 24, 28
N A M E I N D E X 341
Englehardt, H. T. Jr, 82Enright, A., 288, 291–292, 294, 296Esau, 228The Essential General Theory of Haikai-Renga,
266, 273Eugene Onegin, 243Eve, 27, 158, 171, 174, 177Everything happens, 6–8, 12–13Experience and Judgment, 313–314, 317–318Eyck, V., 325–327
Fabula, 204, 208Fagles, R., 33–41The Fall, 325–327Fankl, V., 21Faulkner, W., 21, 193–208Faust, 68, 128, 249Female Psychology, 88–89Fergus, 220Fifth Reflection, 203Finn, H., 156, 208Fitzgerald, F. S., 97–102Flaubert, G., 89, 189, 260Flore, 107–110, 112, 114, 117, 124–128, 130Fogle, R. H., 177, 179Foster, R. F., 216Fourcade, D., 3–14Fourth Reflection, 201Frank, J., 223, 232Franklin, B., 168Freud, S., 104, 129, 205, 208, 266Fr. Keon, 85–87, 91Fufu, 290, 292Fuller, M., 172, 176, 179Funke, G., 169, 173, 178
Gadamer, H. -G., 150, 244Galileo, 311–312The Genealogy of Morals, 36, 38, 41, 130Georgie, 215–216Ghost Train to the Eastern Star, 184, 189–190Gilead, 224, 226–228, 231Gina, 247Giovanni, 167–179The God Who May Be, 215Gogol, N., 248Goldbarth, A., 283The Golden Bowl, 153, 156, 158, 161Gomes, 324–325
Gomez, 324Gonne, M., 220Gordimer, N., 183Gornick, V., 284, 296Gorny, 243Gostrey, M., 159–160The Great Railway Bazaar, 184Greene, M., 300Gregers, 247Grigorovich, Y., 275Gruzdyov, 243Guardini, R., 24, 28Gurn, 279
Habermas, J., 154Hamlet, 247–251, 324Hamon, P., 5, 12Hantaï, S., 10, 12, 14The Happy Isles of Oceania, 181, 183–184, 190Hardy, J., 24, 28Hawthorne, 167–179Haynes, M., 220Hedvig, 247Hegel, G. W. F., 33–36, 39–40, 119, 131, 153,
162, 329Heidegger, M., 19, 26, 72–73, 131, 149, 203,
205–206, 236, 325, 329–337Heine, H., 248Helen, 20, 36, 39, 100–101Henchy, 84–86Hepzibah, 177Heraclitus Seminar, 330Herodotus, 71–72, 74, 77–80Hester, 168, 171Hilda, 169Hitler, A., 292, 338Hjalmar, 247Hobson, T., 135Hocquard, E., 3–14Hogan, P., 333Home, 224–226, 231–232Homer, 71–72, 74–79, 196, 207Honoria, 97, 99–101Horatio, 251Horton, 220Hotel, R., 98Hough, G., 220–221The House of Bernarda Alba, 334–336House Made of Dawn, 18
342 N A M E I N D E X
The House of the Seven Gables, 175–176The Human Beast, 104–105, 112, 116, 119, 125,
129–131Hume, 68, 115Hurley, S., 332Husserl, E., 23, 28, 67, 97, 99, 101, 169–170, 174,
176, 178–179, 206, 215–218, 221, 235–238,261, 267, 273, 309, 311–318
Hynes, 84–87, 90–92
Iacoboni, M., 332–333Iago, 251Ibsen, H., 246–247, 249Ida, 47–48, 50, 52–53, 63As I lay dying, 21–22Ilya, 243Infancy and history, 5, 12Ingarden, R., 207, 235–236, 239, 300Iphigenia, 36, 39Irena, 243, 247–250, 252Iron in the Soul, 321Iser, W., 167, 178, 207–208
Jackson, J., 83Jacob, 228Jakobson, R., 261, 263–264, 267, 273Jalbert, J. E., 216James, H., 46–47, 54–55, 57–58, 66–68, 131,
153–154, 156–157, 159–162James, W., 153Jason, 193–199, 201–208Jaspers, K., 299Jeannie, 277–278Jesus Christ, 134, 152Johnson, M., 330, 334–335, 337Jordan, E. K., 310Joseph, 28, 201, 228, 275, 279–280Josipovici, G., 295, 297Joyce, J., 81–93, 272The Just Judges, 325
Kadar, J., 279Kant, I., 103–104, 111, 120, 128, 130, 154–155,
178, 285Kapoorchand, 188Karamazov, I., 135Katerina, 275–280Katya, 279–280Kearney, R., 215
Keller, H., 20, 22Kepinski, A., 236, 239Kierkegaard, S., 135, 146, 149Klee, P., 6, 12Koestenbaum, W., 283Komachi, O., 265–266, 271Konstantin, 243–250, 252–253Korsgaard, C., 154Kovalevsky, S., 285, 287, 289–292Kovalevsky, V., 286
Lakoff, G., 330, 334–335, 337Lantier, J., 109La prose du monde, 305, 308The Last Gentleman, 23, 25, 28La Sylphide, 275–280Lauer, Q., 170, 178Laurent, 112Levinas, E., 189, 236, 238–239, 291, 293, 295,
297, 337L’homme revolte, 149Lila, 231–232Lisabetta, 172Lison, 123–126Lissadell, 218Log from the ‘Sea of Cortez’, 309–318Lorca, F. G., 334–338Lord Claude, 50–54, 60–65Louissette, 108L’in-plano, 8, 13Luckmann, T., 82, 84–85Luster, 196–197, 204, 206–207, 333Lyons, 86
Macbeth, 21, 193, 202, 250MacGregor, 220MacKinnon, C., 161Madame Bovary, 260Madge, 275, 277, 279Magi, 219–220Maisie, 46–69Maksim, 286–287, 289–290Malcolm, 14, 193Mallarmé, S., 19, 305Manet, E., 7–8, 10The Marble Faun, 175Marcel, G., 299Marcus, B., 283Marian, 99–101
N A M E I N D E X 343
Marie, 136, 138–141Marx, K., 104Masha, 243–244, 247–248Mathieu, 321, 324–325Matilda, C., 58, 64McGinley, B., 83Mensch, J. R., 97, 101–102The Merchant of Venice, 251Mercy, D., 7, 39Merleau-Ponty, M., 43, 299–308The Metaphysical Foundations of Logic,
330, 337Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals, 285, 296Meursault, 133–152Michaelangelo, 27A Midsummer Night’s Dream, 19, 250Miller, J. N., 173, 179Milton, 226Mirroring People, 332Misard, 108–109, 114–115, 117, 122,
125, 127Mitchell, T. R., 172, 176, 179Modus legendi, 144Momaday, S., 18, 20The Monkey’s Straw Raincoat, 264Monteith, K., 216–217Moore, T. R., 174, 176, 179Morley, 279Mróz, P., 324, 327Munan, S., 275–276, 279–280Munro, A., 283, 285–292, 294–296Murakami, H., 183Murdoch, I., 285–288, 291, 293, 296
Naegeli, J., 294–295The Nausea, 320, 324Nawng, O., 187–188Nekrasov, N., 248Newsome, 159–160Nietzsche, F., 17–18, 22, 33, 36–41, 45, 66–67,
69, 129–131, 135, 149, 152Nijo, Y., 259, 263, 271, 273Nina, 243–246, 248–250, 252Nirat, 182North, M., 213Nose, A., 259, 265–266, 273Nouvelle Histoire de la Littérature du
Congo-Kinshasa, 11Nussbaum, M., 153–154, 161
O’Connor, 83, 85Odysseus, 181Oedipus, 55Ogawa, K., 257Ogawa, T., 273Oisin, 217Oku-no-hosomichi (essay), 270Old Ekdal, 247The Old Patagonian Express, 183, 190Old Werle, 247Oppen, G., 7–8The Oresteia, 33–36, 38–41Orestes, 35, 37–39Outrance Utterance, 8–10, 12–14The Oxford English Dictionary, 225
Pamuk, O., 183Parid de Soir, 324Paris, 11–14, 36, 39, 62, 68, 97–99, 119, 124,
129–130, 138, 146, 148–151, 159–160, 162,267, 286–287, 289, 308, 324–327
Parnell, C. S., 83, 87, 91–92Passive Synthesis, 258, 261, 266–267Patterson, 247Paz, O., 258, 262, 272Pearl, 169, 171, 177Pecqueux, 127–128Peer Gynt, 249Penelope, 181–182Per Amica Silentia Lunae, 221Percy, W., 23–24, 27–28, 101Perriam, 52Peters, H., 101Petit colon, 148, 151Phasie, 107–109, 114–115, 117, 119–121,
125, 127Phenomenology of Perception, 300Philomena, 121, 127Philosophie de l’ambiguité, 301, 308Philosophy of Drama, 235–241Philosophy of the Flesh, 330, 337Phoebe, 169, 177Picasso, 278, 284Pippin, R., 153–154, 161–162The Plague, 323–325Play Without a Title, 335Poincaré, J., 287Polina, 243A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, 90
344 N A M E I N D E X
Powell, B., 77President Grandmorin, 105, 107–108, 113–114,
117–118, 120–121Priam, 39Proust, M., 7, 271–272Pushkin, A., 243, 248Pylades, 39
Quarles, L., 101Queen Elizabeth, 160Quentin, 193–196, 198–199, 201–204Quignard, P., 11
Railsback, B., 316, 318Rancière, J., 8, 13Rappaccini, 167–168, 170–172, 174–176,
178–179Rawls, J., 154Reality Hunger, 283, 296Rebel, 149, 323–325, 327Renga (Japanese poetry), 257–273Renoir, 307The Reprieve, 321Requiem for a Nun, 200Ricardo, D., 184Richard the Third, 225Ricketts, E., 309Ricoeur, P., 11, 83, 193–208, 248Ricordo, 158Rieux, B. Dr, 323–324Rimbaud, 183Rimmon-Kenan, S., 88Riva, S., 10–11The Roads to Freedom, 321, 324Robert, 228Robespierre, M., 4Robin, 177Robinson Crusoe, 185Robinson, M., 223–225, 229, 231–233Roger, 68, 171Roger Malvin’s Burial, 167Roquentin, 320, 324Rorty, R., 153–154, 156, 161The Rose, 220Rosenzweig, F., 236Roubaud, 11, 105–114, 117–118, 121–122, 125Rousseau, J. -J, 260, 263Royet-Journoud, C., 8, 13Rudhardt, J., 76
Ryf, R. S., 221Ryunosuke, A., 270
Saddle, H., 183Saigyo, 265, 273St. Augustine, 97–102, 134, 146, 149, 152,
206–207St. John, 325St. Patric, 216Santayanna, G., 17Sarrasine, 82Sartre, J. -P., 21, 150, 152, 161, 225, 299–302,
308, 319–327Satan, 171, 174, 291Sauver Byzance de la barbarie du monde, 11The Scarlet Letter, 168, 178Schaefer, D., 101Scheler, M., 236, 241Scherman, K., 216Schiller, F., 129, 260Schopenhauer, A., 44, 66, 104, 108–109, 116,
129–130, 285Schutz, A., 82, 84–85The Sea Gull, 243–253Searle, J., 157Sebald, W. G., 284–285, 292–297The Second Coming, 25The Second Rate Art, 257Second Reflection, 199The Secret Rose, 219–220Selwyn, H. Dr, 293–295Semyon, 243Seven Major Anthologies of Basho, 258Severine, 67, 105–109, 111–114, 116–127Seweryn, H., 294–295Shakespeare, W., 19, 198, 201–202, 225,
247–248, 250–251, 257Shakespear, O., 220Shestov, L., 299Shields, D., 283–285, 291, 296Shiho, 268–269Shiki, M., 257, 261, 265, 273Shurr, W. H., 174, 179Socrates, 34, 115, 128, 130, 136, 149, 193Soko, 263On Some Motifs in Baudelaire, 5, 12The Sound and the Fury, 193–208Sources of the Self, 154Stant, C., 158
N A M E I N D E X 345
Steinbeck, J., 309–318Steppenwolf, 183Stewart, G., 201–202Stocking, D., 75The Stone Flower (ballet), 275–281The Story of My Life, 21, 22The Stranger, 133–152Strether, L., 158–160Structure de la Comportement, 301Structures of the Life-World, 82Stuart, M., 160Sui generis, 44, 46, 52, 55, 60, 104,
125, 224Sullivan, A., 21Summa theologica, 134, 149Synge, J. M., 214
Takeo, K., 257Tatyana, 243Taylor, C., 153–155, 160–162The Tempest, 250Thérèse, 112Theroux, P., 181–191Theses on the philosophy of history,
3, 11Thinking According to Values (book), 236Third Reflection, 200Thomas, R., 78Thompson, G., 35Thoreau, H. D., 186Tierney, R., 83–87, 91–92Time and Narrative, 194, 205–207Tischner, J., 235–241Tolstoy, L., 248Tony, 187Too Much Happiness, 285, 287–288, 290,
292, 296Torahiko, T., 262, 266–268, 270, 273The Tower, 214, 216, 219–221The Trembling of the Veil, 213–214Treplyov, K., 244Trigorin, B., 244–245, 247–248, 250Trilby, ou le lutin d’Argail (novel), 275–277Turgenev, I., 248Twice-Told Tales, 176Tymieniecka, A.-T., 66–68, 128–131, 297, 318,
339, 342
Ulysses, 278
Vacillation, 221Vandiver, E., 37, 41van Gogh, V., 307van Meter, A., 324, 327Vaught, J., 24–27Vaught, K., 24–25Vaught, R., 24–25Verver, M., 158Virilio, P., 5, 11A Vision, 214–215, 218, 220von Goethe, J. W., 19, 68, 128, 249, 257, 260von Humboldt, A., 19
Wagenknecht, E., 173, 179Wales, C., 97–99, 101The Waste Land, 12, 272Watching Cherry Blossoms, 258Weierstrass, K., 286–290Weil, S., 288Wendy, 187What is Literature?, 220, 321, 327What Maisie Knew, 46–47, 55, 66–69Wheeler, B. M., 325–327The Wild Duck, 246–247, 249Wilde, O., 251Willis, F., 320Wilson III, R. J., 83, 88, 206, 341, 343Winnington-Ingram, A. F., 35, 39–41Wittgenstein, L., 9Wix, 51, 53, 61, 63–66The Wolf, 250Wood, J., 227, 233Woollett, 159–160The Words, 319–321, 326World Trade Center, 291
Yeadon, D., 181–182, 187, 190Yeats, W. B., 188, 213–221Yimidirrh, G., 187
Zaner, R. M., 82Zelda, 100Zola, E., 67, 69, 103–104, 106, 108–109, 112,
115–116, 118–119, 129–130, 248Zunshine, L., 333
P L E A S E P O S T!
The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and LearningInstitut Mondial des Hautes Etudes Phenomenologiques
Weltinstitut fur Fortgeschrittene Phanomenologische Forschung und BildungInstituto Mondiale di Ricena e di Studi Avanaxati di
FenomenologiaInstituto Mondiale De Altos Estudios Fenomenologicos
1 Ivy Pointe WayHanover, New Hampshire 03755, United StatesTelephone: (802) 295-3487; Fax: (802) 295-5963Website: http://www.phenomenology.org
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF PHENOMENOLOGYAND LITERATURE (AN AFFILIATE OF THE WORLD
PHENOMENOLOGY INSTITUTE)
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, Program Coordinator
33rd ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Topic: DESTINY: THE INWARD QUEST, TEMPORALITY,AND DOOMPlace: Radcliffe Gymnasium, 10 Garden Street, Radcliffe Yard,Cambridge, MassachusettsDates: May 12 and 13, 2009
P R O G R A M
Tuesday, May 12, 2009REGISTRATION, 8:30–9:30 AM
9:30 AM INAUGURAL ADDRESS:Chaired by: Rebecca M. Painter, Marymount Manhattan College
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, World Phenomenology Institute
P U B L I C I N V I T E D
P L E A S E P O S T!
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 SESSION I:10:00 AM Chaired by: Piotr Mroz, Jagiellonian University
TEMPORALITY IN FITZGERALD’S BABYLON REVISITEDBernadette Prochaska, Marquette University
“THE LIMITS OF ORDINARY EXPERIENCE”: A PHENOMENOLOGICAL APPROACH TORAPPACCINI’S DAUGHTERR. Kenneth Kirby, Samford University
THE NON-INTERCHANGEABLE CORRELATIVES OF FATE AND DESTINYImafedia Okhamafe, University of Nebraska
WHAT MASIE KNEW IN WHAT MASIE KNEWVictor Gerald Rivas, University of Puebla
RECUPERATION OF DEATH BY TWO FRENCH FEMALE AUTHORS, SIMONE DE BEAUVOIRAND SOPHIE CALLEMarcelline Block, Princeton University
1:00 PM Lunch at the Harvard Faculty Club
3:00–7:00 PM SESSION II:Chaired by: Bernadette Prochaska, Marquette University
HUMAN DRAMA IN PHILOSOPHY OF TISCHNERLeszek Pyra, Krakow, Poland
THE TRANS-SUBJECTIVE CREATION OF POETRY AND ATMOSPHERE:A SHORT STUDY OF THE JAPANESE RENGATadashi Ogawa, University of Human Environments, Okazaki, Japan
THE THEORY OF LITERATURE AND POETRY IN MERLEAU-PONTY’S PHENOMENOLOGYPiotr Mroz, Jagiellonian University
HEIDEGGER AND MUSILMark M. Freed, Central Michigan University
PRESENT ETERNITY: QUESTS OF TEMPORALITY IN THE LITERARY PRODUCTION OF THE<<EXTREME CONTEMPORAIN>> IN FRANCE (THE WRITINGS OF DOMINIQUE FOURCADEAND EMMANUEL HOCQUARD)Silvia Riva, University of Milan
MORAL SHAPES OF TIME IN HENRY JAMESMeili Steele, University of South Carolina
FAULKNER’S THE SOUND AND THE FURY AS ANTI-ENTROPIC NOVELJerre Collins, University of Wisconsin – Whitewater
P U B L I C I N V I T E D
P L E A S E P O S T!
Wednesday, May 13, 2009 SESSION III:9:00 AM Chaired by: Victor Gerald Rivas, University of Puebla
ALTERED STATES: THE ARTISTIC QUEST IN THE STONE FLOWER AND LA SYLPHIDEBruce Ross, Hampden, Maine
A PERFECT PICTURE OF THE FUTURE: THE REPRESENTATION OF THINGS THAT THINK INDALTON TRUMBO’S JOHNNY GOT HIS GUNWilliam Scott, University of Pittsburgh
WHITHER GOEST TODAY’S PRODIGAL SON? MARILYNNE ROBINSON’S HOME ASEXPLORATION OF PERSONAL DOOMRebecca M. Painter, Marymount Manhattan College
REVISITING STEINBECK’S LITTORAL PHENOMENOLOGY: HUSSERLIAN ELEMENTS INTHE LOG FROM THE ‘SEA OF CORTEZ’Gretchen Gusich, Loyola Marymount University
1:00 PM Lunch together
2:00 – 7:00 PM SESSION IV:Chaired by: Danzankhorloo Dashpurev, The Institute of Philosophy, Sociology,and Political Science, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
GAIL GOODWEIN: NEGOTIATING WITH DESTINY IN THE ODD WOMAN AND “DREAMCHILDREN”Raymond J. Wilson III, Loras College
NATURALIZED PHENOMENOLOGY AND KING ALFRED’S TRANSLATION OFAUGUSTINE’S SOLILOQUIA: AN ANALYSIS OF THE MOVE FROM SPIRITUALITY TOMATERIALITYRonald J. Ganze, The University of South Dakota
THE ROLE OF ART IN CAMUS AND SARTRE PHILOSOPHYJoanna Handerek, Jagiellonian University
PHILOSOPHY AS THERAPY: THE CASE OF HEIDEGGERRobert D. Stolorow, Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis and Robert Eli Sanchez, University ofCalifornia at Riverside
TEMPORAL PARALYSIS: THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF SHAME IN BERNHARD SCHLINK’STHE READERLewis Livesay, Saint Peter’s College
TAIJA DIAGRAM: A MIRROR OF THE SUPER-SYMMETRIC WORLDTsung-I Dow, Florida Atlantic University
P U B L I C I N V I T E D
P L E A S E P O S T!
The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and LearningInstitut Mondial des Hautes Etudes Phenomenologiques
Weltinstitut fur Fortgeschrittene Phanomenologische Forschung und BildungInstituto Mondiale di Ricena e di Studi Avanaxati di
FenomenologiaInstituto Mondiale De Altos Estudios Fenomenologicos
1 Ivy Pointe WayHanover, New Hampshire 03755, United StatesTelephone: (802) 295-3487; Fax: (802) 295-5963Website: http://www.phenomenology.org
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF PHENOMENOLOGYAND LITERATURE (AN AFFILIATE OF THE WORLD
PHENOMENOLOGY INSTITUTE)
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, Program Coordinator
34th ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Topic: THE SENSE OF LIFE REFLECTED IN HISTORYOF LITERATUREPlace: Radcliffe Gymnasium, 10 Garden Street, Radcliffe Yard,Cambridge, MassachusettsDates: May 11 and 12, 2010
P R O G R A M
Tuesday, May 11, 2010ON SITE REGISTRATION, 9:00–9:30 AM
9:30 AM OPENING ADDRESS:Chaired by: Bernadette Prochaska, Marquette University
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, World Phenomenology Institute
P U B L I C I N V I T E D
P L E A S E P O S T!
Tuesday, May 11, 2010 SESSION I:10:00 AM Chaired by: Raymond Wilson, Loras College
THE STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS: LITERARY PSYCHOLOGY AS THE FIRSTUNIQUELY AMERICAN EXPRESSION OF PHENOMENOLOGY IN WILLIAM JAMESAND HIS SWEDENBORGIAN AND TRANSCENDENTALIST MILIEUEugene Taylor
THE SENSE OF LIFE AND INTERNECINE INTRUSIONS: SHAKESPEARE’SCORIOLANUS AND JONSON’S CATILINEPaul J. Green
“THE SENSE OF LIFE” AS A PHILOSOPHICAL PROJECTDorota Probucka
THE SENSE OF LIFE IN LANGUAGE LOVE AND LITERATURELawrence Kimmel, Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas
1:00 PM Lunch at the Harvard Faculty Club
3:00 – 7:00 PM SESSION II:Chaired by: Bernadette Prochaska, Marquette University
THE EVOLUTION OF JUSTICE IN THE ORESTEIAHeidi Silcox, University of Central Oklahoma
A DOUBLE PHENOMENOLOGICAL SENSE OF THE HYBRID OF FATE AND DESTINYIN COMMUNITY IN ACHEBE’S ARROW AND HEAD’S TREASURESImafedia Okhamafe, University of Nebraska
ANCIENT LITERATURE: SCHOOLS OF BEING IN THE HOUSE OF STYLEDamian Stocking, Occidental College
JAMES JOYCE’S IVY DAY IN THE COMMITTEE ROOM” AND THE FIVE CODES OFFICTIONRaymond Wilson, Loras College
P U B L I C I N V I T E D
P L E A S E P O S T!
Wednesday, May 12, 2010 SESSION III:9:00 AM Chaired by: Victor G. Rivas, University of Puebla
THE GARDEN THEN AND NOW; SENSE OF LIFE – CONTEMPORARY AND IN GENESISBernadette Prochaska, Marquette University
“MAIS PERSONNE NE PARAISSAIT COMPRENDRE” (“BUT NO ONE SEEMED TOUNDERSTAND”): ATHEISM, NIHILISM, AND HERMENEUTICS IN CAMUS’ THESTRANGERGeorge Heffernan, Merrimack College
ON THE METAPHYSICAL VIOLENCE OF LIFE IN THE LIGHT OF ZOLA’S THE HUMANBEASTVictor G. Rivas, University of Puebla
THE DETAILS OF LIFE: SENSE AND MEANING IN FLAUBERT’S MADAME BOVARYHarriet Stone, Washington University in St. Louis
STAGING HEIDEGGER: CORPOREAL PHILOSOPHY, COGNITIVE SCIENCE, AND THETHEATERThomas Blake, Monroe Community College
1:00 PM Lunch together
2:00 – 7:00 PM SESSION IV:Chaired by: Mark Silcox, University of Central Oklahoma
HISTORICAL DISTORTIONS AND LITERARY DISCLOSURES IN D.M. THOMAS’S THEWHITE HOTELLewis Livesay, Saint Peter’s College
W.B. YEATS, CULTURAL NATIONALISM, AND THE ESSENCE OF SPIRITUAL IRELANDR. Kenneth Kirby, Samford University
THE KINDNESS OF STRANGERS: EPIPHANY AND SOCIAL COMMUNION IN PAULTHEROUX’S TRAVEL WRITINGBruce Ross, Independent Scholar
THE SENSE OF LIFE REALISED IN VARIOUS PERSONAL ENCOUNTERSLeszek Pyra, Krakow, Poland
EMERSON AFFINITIES: READING RICHARD FORD THROUGH STANLEY CAVELLLawrence F. Rhu, University of South Carolina
P U B L I C I N V I T E D