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portada Narcissus, or the Lover of Himself
Type
Physical Book
Epilogue by
Translated by
Language
English
Pages
128
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
20.3 x 12.7 x 0.7 cm
Weight
0.13 kg.
ISBN13
9781940625133

Narcissus, or the Lover of Himself

Jean-Jacques Rousseau (Author) · Simon Critchley (Epilogue by) · Daniel Boden (Translated by) · Contra Mundum Press · Paperback

Narcissus, or the Lover of Himself - Simon Critchley

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Delivery: 14 Jul - 22 Jul Shipping: 4 to 5 business days.
NT$ 584
NT$ 584

Synopsis "Narcissus, or the Lover of Himself "

Narcissus, or The Lover of Himself is a play of staggering mediocrity. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, better known as a social thinker than as a playwright, claims to have written it as a young man of eighteen, some twenty years before it was performed for King Louis XV on December 18, 1752. It flopped and never saw the stage again in Rousseau's lifetime. In his preface to the play, penned after its failed production, Rousseau avows that he kept himself from publishing it for as long as he held onto some regard for his reputation as an author. This is a fairly measured judgment, for a work the caliber of Narcissus would certainly not bolster Rousseau's status. The plot, characters, language, and comedic elements come off as weak or incomplete. Hence, the reader (or spectator) could understandably question the play's merits, and the need to publish it. But had Narcissus never been, neither would its preface. This afterthought, two decades in the making, becomes, in many ways, a much more interesting opening act to the comedy that follows. It is rich in philosophy and criticism, madly buzzing with paranoia, and surprisingly convincing in its proposition that the arts and sciences, the pursuit of knowledge, the cultivation of letters, and all the trappings of civilization are destructive forces, harmful to man's morality. It is an apology for having experimented with writing literature in his foolish youth and, at the same time, a justification for the existence of his art. The preface, in which he writes, "I must, despite my reluctance, speak of myself," is fully narcissistic. Peering over Rousseau's shoulder, we, too, see his reflection: a man with reason on his side, standing against his enemies, his age, and, indeed, the world. Daniel Boden's translation of Narcissus and its preface is true to the voice, times, and incongruities of Rousseau. In the afterword that crowns this edition, Simon Critchley situates the play and preface in their historical context, makes connections to other works by Rousseau, comments on the philosophy put forward in the preface, reflects on what brings the classics to the stage, and proposes, quite simply, that theater is narcissism.
Simon Critchley
  (Epilogue by)
View Author's Page
Simon Critchley (Herfordshire, Reino Unido, 1960) es filósofo y desde 2004 imparte clases en la New School for Social Research de Nueva York. En 2021 la Academic Influence le nombró uno de los veinticinco filósofos contemporáneos más influyentes por su trayectoria ecléctica, a lo largo de la cual se ha dedicado a la filosofía continental, la teoría política y el estudio de figuras como David Bowie. Entre sus más de veinte obras publicadas destacan los ensayos El libro de los filósofos muertos (Taurus, 2008), Apuntes sobre el suicidio –editado en castellano por Alpha Decay en 2016 y recuperado en 2022–, En qué pensamos cuando pensamos en fútbol (Sexto Piso, 2018), La tragedia, los griegos y nosotros (Turner, 2020) y la novela El teatro de la memoria (Alpha Decay, 2016).
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All books in our catalog are Original.
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