Hermeneutics
Walter Veit
8 or 12 points * 2 hours per week * First semester * Clayton
The subject studies the main events in the development of hermeneutics from a theory and practice of textual interpretation during the Englightenment and the nineteenth century to a modern theory of understanding and knowledge in the work of Martin Heidegger, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Jurgen Habermas, as well as its application in the study of literature and history in the work of E D Hirsch, Emilio Betti, Paul Ricoeur and Hans Robert Jauss. It addresses problems such as the conflict between subjectivity and objectivity, the dialectics of the foreign and the familiar, the recognition of the new, the role of language and the function of tradition in understanding, the universality of hermeneutics as a theory of cognition and its impact on the social sciences.
Assessment: 8 points
Two seminar papers * Long essay (4000 words)
Assessment: 12 points
Two seminar papers * Long essay (6000 words)
Prescribed text
Mueller-Vollmer K (ed.) The hermeneutics reader Basil Blackwell, 1985
Recommended texts
Baynes K and others After philosophy: End or transformation? MIT Press, 1987
Bleicher J Contemporary hermeneutics: Hermeneutics as a philosophy, method and critique Routledge, 1980
Dallmayr W and McCarthy T (eds) Understanding and social inquiry Notre Dame UP, 1977
Howard R Three faces of hermeneutics U California P, 1983
Natoli J (ed.) Tracing literary theory Illinois UP, 1987
Palmer R E Hermeneutics Northwestern UP, 1969
Radnitzky G Contemporary schools of metascience Akademiforlaget, 1973
Stamiris Y Main currents in twentieth century literary criticism: A critical study Whitson, 1986
Wachterhauser B R (ed.) Hermeneutics and modern philosophy SUNY Press, 1986