A Kierkegaard Anthology

by Søren Kierkegaard, Robert Bretall (Editor)

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This anthology covers the whole of Kierkegaard's literary career. The selections range from the terse epigrams of the Journal through the famous "Diary of the Seducer" and the "Banquet" scene, in which Søren Kierkegaard reveals his great lyric and dramatic gifts, on to the philosophical and psychological works of his maturity. These are climaxed by the beautiful and moving religious discourses which accompany them; finally, there is the biting satire of his Attack upon "Christendom."This is show more emphatically not a collection of "snippets," but the cream of Kierkegaard, each selection interesting and intelligible in itself, and all ranking among his most important work. They are so arranged as to convey an idea of his remarkable intellectual development.Contents: A comprehensive anthology from the following works: Either/Or Fear and Trembling Stages on Life's Way Works of Love Concluding Unscientific Postscript Attack upon "Christendom" The Sickness Unto Death Philosophical Fragments and other? show less

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You'd never know it from his 'general' reputation, but SK ain't 'hard to read' at all. Far from it, in fact. Being only ~35 pages into this anthology I'd tentatively bracket him with Nietszche in my personal category of philosophers (if that is indeed what he is/was) who write sufficiently well that you begin to be nervous they might not, in fact, be philosophers at all, but "just writers." Of course, I haven't read enough to make judgments I can feel sanguine will remain intact.

When I am in a less charitable mood, which happens more and more often as I age, I refer to the Nietszche - Kierkegaard sort of philosopher as "not a philosopher, but someone who just says shit." It seems that I have a hard time fielding philosophy that does not show more involve at least some level of ... what? argument? logic? Not sure what word I want to use to anchor that ... but much of FN has seemed to me (and I obviously need to reread him, and more closely than before) to be scarcely argued, but simply, well, *stated*. Mind you I admit that some of the shit these folks just say is brilliant. 'Tain't that.

UPDATE: now that I'm almost done with this book, I have a couple of other ... whattyacallems. Observations? Sounds too grand. Snarks? No, not really.

I note above that SK (even the editors of this volume refer to him that way -- I guess that's what happens when your last name is long and weird-looking) "isn't hard to read." I guess I mostly stand by that if we're talking about the sentence level ... but as you might expect, on a larger or more comprehensive scale, he is extremely subtle and even slippery ... a lover of irony and of sneaking up behind the reader and poking him or her with a sharp stick.

Your interest in SK and in this volume might hinge upon your interest in Christianity as a ... oh, golly, what words shall I use here? mode of being? I almost typed "mode of thought" but if SK is about anything, he was about separating Christianity from any kind of ... *rational* sub- or superstructure. In this he's not too terribly far from the whole "I believe because it is absurd" strain of things -- and what, finally can one say about all this? is it convincing? is it philosophy? is it ... right? Sigh. What to do. I have this awful feeling that if I had met SK and spoken with him, he would rapidly have put me in some category of person or other he deals with somewhere in his writings. Because like Socrates, whose legacy he often appeals to, SK was among other things a gadfly. He was a truly great writer, but I'm glad I'm almost done with ... all this Christianity, so I can get on with things that are closer to what I think of as "philosophy qua philosophy."
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This is a collection of the works of Kierkegaard organized chronologically. It is meant to show his development as an author and as a writer in general. I don't know if they included all of the works, but some of them are abridged and have to have footnotes explaining some parts. The book starts each work off with a short biographical bit telling us where Kierkegaard was at this point in his life. So initially it shows the journals from 1834-1842, then comes Either/Or, Fear and Trembling and so on. This guy's life is actually rather sad. I suppose he might feel vindicated that he is now considered a founder of the Existentialist school of thought, but I am sure it would be nicer to be recognized when he was alive.
Selections from Kierkegaard's works.

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631+ Works 33,116 Members
Born in Copenhagen, Denmark, Søren Kierkegaard was the son of a wealthy middle-class merchant. He lived all his life on his inheritance, using it to finance his literary career. He studied theology at the University of Copenhagen, completing a master's thesis in 1841 on the topic of irony in Socrates. At about this time, he became engaged to a show more woman he loved, but he broke the engagement when he decided that God had destined him not to marry. The years 1841 to 1846 were a period of intense literary activity for Kierkegaard, in which he produced his "authorship," a series of writings of varying forms published under a series of fantastic pseudonyms. Parallel to these, he wrote a series of shorter Edifying Discourses, quasi-sermons published under his own name. As he later interpreted it in the posthumously published Point of View for My Work as an Author, the authorship was a systematic attempt to raise the question of what it means to be a Christian. Kierkegaard was persuaded that in his time people took the meaning of the Christian life for granted, allowing all kinds of worldly and pagan ways of thinking and living to pass for Christian. He applied this analysis especially to the speculative philosophy of German idealism. After 1846, Kierkegaard continued to write, publishing most works under his own name. Within Denmark he was isolated and often despised, a man whose writings had little impact in his own day or for a long time afterward. They were translated into German early in the twentieth century and have had an enormous influence since then, on both Christian theology and the existentialist tradition in philosophy. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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4 Works 1,450 Members

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1946
People/Characters
Søren Kierkegaard
Dedication
To
DAVID F. SWENSON
Late Professor of Philosophy in the University of Minnesota
and
WALTER LOWRIE, D.D.
Devoted Laborers
in the
Kierkegaardian vineyard

Classifications

Genres
Philosophy, Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
198.9Philosophy & psychologyModern western philosophyPhilosophy of Scandinavia and FinlandDenmark
LCC
B4372 .E5 .B7Philosophy, Psychology and ReligionPhilosophy (General)By periodModernBy region or country
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1,191
Popularity
20,911
Reviews
3
Rating
(4.21)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
ASINs
22