In the name of the Author: The artificial unity of Jan Patočka’s scattered works
At the time of his sudden death in 1977, the Czech philosopher Jan Patočka left a large philosophical legacy with no will and testament. For the last 43 years, the editors of his Collected Works have been reconstructing a unified and thematically articulated oeuvre from the more than 10,000 pages fo...
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Published in | Aisthesis (Florence, Italy) Vol. 13; no. 2 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Firenze University Press
01.12.2020
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | At the time of his sudden death in 1977, the Czech philosopher Jan Patočka left a large philosophical legacy with no will and testament. For the last 43 years, the editors of his Collected Works have been reconstructing a unified and thematically articulated oeuvre from the more than 10,000 pages found in his drawers and boxes. It should in the end include not only the texts published during Patočka’s lifetime but also his many unpublished manuscripts, fragments, variations, drafts of unfinished philosophical projects, notebooks and letters. After demonstrating in which sense the death of the author coincides in Patočka’s case with the birth of his oeuvre, the article aims to show that the unity of Patočka’s work is not something given, but rather something to be artificially reconstructed, in an always disputable fashion, since the internal coherence of its various thematic divisions is necessarily itself a matter of ongoing interpretation. |
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ISSN: | 2035-8466 |
DOI: | 10.13128/Aisthesis-11836 |