Lyudmila Grigorova The Philosophical and Literary Etudes of Isaac Passy
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Summary/Abstract
SummaryIt is almost impossible to define this book by genre. It is entitled "Philosophical Literary Etudes". Already in the title, Isaac Passy has hinted at its diversity. Because this is a collection composed of philosophical sketches on works from the world literary classics. From Boccaccio to Thomas Mann, from the Early Renaissance to the mid-twentieth century. From "The Decameron" to "Doctor Faustus". The author, and also the artist (in designing the title) had in mind the greater proximity of the book to the philosophical sketch and have emphasized this proximity in order to make it easier for the reader. The difficulty in defining it in terms of genre comes not only from the many focuses of Philosophy and especially aesthetics with literature, but also from the "lack" of unity in the approach of its author. Isaac Passy is not a Literary Critic and he does not approach the works from the positions of a literary scholar-researcher. And yet these are critical studies in which philosophy and literature go hand in hand; they condition each other. Moreover, in the contemporary state of knowledge, there is not and cannot be a precise demarcation between the individual sciences; very often they study the same object - in this case - the Literary Work. And the author is a living person and when he writes, he thinks least of all about which branch lovers of precise classifications and pedants will attribute his work to. However, the given predominance of philosophy is evident not only in the deliberate selection of the works ("The Unknown Masterpiece" by Balzac is a philosophical study, and Voltaire's "Candide" ephilosophical story), but also in the conscious search for philosophical and aesthetic problems, and in works whose authors were never art theorists, nor were they concerned with the fate of the creator of artistic values. Writers such as Cervantes and Shakespeare, for example, consciously or not, have left behind a lot of problems and dilemmas - resolved and unresolved, and perhaps even unsolvable, over which people have been pondering for four centuries. But if they had said clearly and categorically who Hamlet is and who Don Quixote, would these works have attracted generations so strongly? As they are, they give the reader the opportunity to build their own ideas, which they can contrast with others.Keywords: Философските, литературните, етюди, Исак, Паси