generative evocation of world. (2) Through images, a poem may evoke the way in which space and time are inhabited as a world of human dwelling in an ontologically or existentially meaningful way. The relation of images to world is, then, an illumination or a disclosure of world. The first of these relations remains, to a large extent, immanent to the poem, but may be seen as an analogue of the essentially human experience of inhabiting a world. The second relation transcends the poem and relates the poem immediately to the existential framework of human dwelling." /> The world and image of poetic language - Gosetti-Ferencei Jennifer | sdvig press

The world and image of poetic language

Heidegger and Blanchot

Jennifer Gosetti-Ferencei

pp. 189-212


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