Hölderlin's Madness: Chronicle of a Dwelling Life, 1806–1843 (The Italian List) (Hardcover)

Hölderlin's Madness: Chronicle of a Dwelling Life, 1806–1843 (The Italian List) By Giorgio Agamben, Alta L. Price (Translated by) Cover Image
By Giorgio Agamben, Alta L. Price (Translated by)
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Description


One of Europe’s greatest living philosophers, Giorgio Agamben, analyzes the life and work of one of Europe’s greatest poets, Friedrich Hölderlin.

What does it mean to inhabit a place or a self? What is a habit? And, for human beings, doesn’t living mean—first and foremost—inhabiting? Pairing a detailed chronology of German poet Friedrich Hölderlin’s years of purported madness with a new examination of texts often considered unreadable, Giorgio Agamben's new book aims to describe and comprehend a life that the poet himself called habitual and inhabited.
 
Hölderlin’s life was split neatly in two: his first 36 years, from 1770 to 1806; and the 36 years from 1807 to 1843, which he spent as a madman holed up in the home of Ernst Zimmer, a carpenter. The poet lived the first half of his existence out and about in the broader world, relatively engaged with current events, only to then spend the second half entirely cut off from the outside world. Despite occasional visitors, it was as if a wall separated him from all external events and relationships. For reasons that may well eventually become clear, Hölderlin chose to expunge all character—historical, social, or otherwise—from the actions and gestures of his daily life. According to his earliest biographer, he often stubbornly repeated, “nothing happens to me.” Such a life can only be the subject of a chronology—not a biography, much less a clinical or psychological analysis. Nevertheless, this book suggests that this is precisely how Hölderlin offers humanity an entirely other notion of what it means to live. Although we have yet to grasp the political significance of his unprecedented way of life, it now clearly speaks directly to our own.
 

About the Author


Giorgio Agamben is one of Italy’s foremost contemporary thinkers. He recently brought to a close his widely influential archaeology of Western politics, the nine-volume Homo Sacer series. 



Alta L. Price runs a publishing consultancy specialized in literature and nonfiction texts on art, architecture, design, and culture. She translates from Italian and German into English and is a founding member of the translators’ collective Cedilla & Co.

Praise For…


"A work of retrieval. . . Agamben's main project is to uncover the political implications for the difference between the chronological life and the biographical life. This book is both creative and profound."
— Choice

"On Agamben’s pages, Hölderlin’s late life simultaneously emerges and vanishes as a potentiality—as an indeterminate, or perhaps uncannily overdetermined, occasion for philosophical speculation."
— Monatshefte
Product Details
ISBN: 9781803091150
ISBN-10: 1803091150
Publisher: Seagull Books
Publication Date: March 10th, 2023
Pages: 280
Series: The Italian List