Lexington Books
Pages: 164
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-7936-4003-1 • Hardback • October 2021 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-7936-4005-5 • Paperback • August 2023 • $39.99 • (£30.00)
978-1-7936-4004-8 • eBook • October 2021 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Wanda Torres Gregory is professor of philosophy at Simmons University.
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: On the Way to Silence
Chapter 1: From the Silent Call of Conscience and Reticent Discourse to the Silencing in Dread and Profound Boredom in Da-sein
Chapter 2: Toward the Essence of Silence
Chapter 3: The Poetics of Silence in a Dialogue with Hölderlin
Chapter 4: Sigetics and the Silence of the Other Beginning in the Appropriating-event
Chapter 5: The Silent Origin of Language in the Confrontation with Herder
Chapter 6: Toward the Originary Logic of Silence in a Translation of Heraclitus
Chapter 7: Quiet Musings in the Project Toward the Stillness
Chapter 8: The Soundless Peal of the Stillness
Chapter 9: Sounding Out the Later Meanings of Silence
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
"With her acute differentiation of human, primordial, and primeval forms of silence, Torres Gregory succeeds in demonstrating Heidegger’s conceptions, early and late, of the dynamic and essential interplay of silence with language and truth. Her splendid study, at once appreciative and critical of Heidegger, is an enormous contribution that fills a considerable lacuna in contemporary examination of this enigmatic thinker."
— Daniel Dahlstrom, Boston University
"Wanda Torres Gregory’s compact and rich study places silence at the core of Heidegger’s philosophy of language. With concise and original interpretations of both lesser-known and well-worn texts from Heidegger’s corpus, she deftly traces the manifold registers of silence, reticence, resonance and sonority which enliven Heidegger’s philosophy of language—if not his entire philosophical project."
— Adam Knowles, Drexel University
Torres Gregory’s Speaking of Silence in Heidegger makes a profound and timely contribution to thinking about silence and its essential relationship to language. It guides us through complex registers of silence including forms of hearkening and reticence as a listening that is deeply attentive to the unsaid and the unsayable. It gives timely warning vis-à-vis the idle talk of the world and our own internal idle talk, reiterating that saying must be attuned to restraint or our ability to quietly listen. Furthermore, a deeper silence is a ‘calling back’ and lies within Da-sein as ‘the stillness of itself’. Moreover, our capacity for ‘the dialogue that we are’ to emerge in community depends on our capacity for attentive stillness within the dangerous noise of the ‘language-machine’.
— Phenomenological Reviews