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epoche of our non-poetic use of language in such a way that it liberates "fixed" universal aspects of everyday language, and that through establishing itself in a new, self-referential and monologue unity, it individualizes speech. From the hermeneutic position, poetry is a form of speaking rather than a "fixed" object. As such, I will try to make sense of what Paul Celan said in his famous "Meridian" speech: namely, that the poem is "actualized language, set free under the sign of a radical individuation, which at the same time stays mindful of the limits drawn by language, the possibilities opened by language."" />
pp. 491-510
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