Lexington Books
Pages: 140
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4985-7891-2 • Hardback • March 2020 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-4985-7893-6 • Paperback • May 2022 • $41.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-7892-9 • eBook • March 2020 • $39.50 • (£30.00)
Karolin Mirzakhan is a lecturer of philosophy at Kennesaw State University.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Paradox and Philosophizing Together
1. An Ironic Approach
2. To Be Ironic Is Divine: Hegel’s Aesthetics and the Threat of Irony
3. Another Way to the Absolute: Language and Naming in the Dao De Jing
4. How to Read a River: Poetic Mysticism in John Ashbery’s Flow Chart
Bibliography
About the Author
In her agile, lucid and brilliant book, Karolin Mirzakhan primarily identifies the ironic character of Friedrich Schlegel's romantic fragments as path to this Absolute. Perhaps it is precisely because of its ironic vocation that this clever book leaves open some of the questions it raises, inviting the reader to always be "alive and critical" towards Symphilosophy or sympoetry.
— Symphilosophie
"Karolin Mirzakhan's An Ironic Approach to the Absolute: Schlegel's Poetic Mysticism argues for the contemporary relevance of Friedrich Schlegel's ironic approach to the interpretation of texts as diverse as ancient philosophy and contemporary poetry. Reading irony against the usual interpretive tendency to emphasize its relation to either transcendence or disruption, Mirzakhan's argument that irony simultaneously testifies to its own finitude and deploys contradiction to exceed limits provides a rich addition to the literature on this subject."— Elaine Miller, Miami University
"Mirzakhan states that her purpose in writing is pedagogical, and her attention to her readers and skill as a communicator are evident throughout this sensitive text. As Mirzakhan claims, Schlegel’s writings on irony and the Dao De Jing are mutually illuminating, especially as deployed by Mirzakhan. Mirzakhan’s patient, insightful unpicking of Schlegelian irony and its resistance to Hegel’s criticism in the early chapters provides an access point to some of the most apparently counter-intuitive claims of this ancient text. Mirzakhan’s careful exposition of the use of metaphor, performance, and other indirect forms of communication in the Dao De Jing guide the reader towards what is unspoken, unilluminated – that which exceeds language and thought – at the heart of Schlegel’s philosophy. Mirzakhan concludes with a lucid account of John Ashbery’s poem Flow Chart that brings the encounter with the Absolute into the 20th century."— Anna Ezekiel, University of York
"The philosophical significance of Early German Romanticism has regained considerable recognition and, within this movement, Friedrich Schlegel deserves special attention. Karolin Mirzakhan's well-written study succeeds in illuminating the complex ironic features of Schlegel's work by comparing it in an original way with that of other writers, ancient (Laozi) and contemporary (Ashbery)."— Karl Ameriks, University of Notre Dame
"Given that the early German Romantics were some of the first truly comparative philosophers, it is most fitting that in, An Ironic Approach to the Absolute, Karolin Mirzakhan places Schlegel’s work into a truly comparative context. This exciting, innovative study clearly establishes Mirzakhan as one of the leading new voices on Schlegel’s work."— Elizabeth Millán Brusslan, DePaul University