Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Abstract:
This paper will take its starting point at the figure of Antigone taken up
by Hegel at various moments of his reflection. For Hegel, the Greek tragedy in
general is the terrain from which to draw emblematic figures, not so much of heroes
and heroines, but of moments of passage. Antigone is a sister, rebellious
against the tyrant’s law, a symbol of the passage from one symbolic universe
to another. Indicating the tragedy on one side and the magic on the other, this
paper aims to focus on the resistance in the unconscious of a symbolic translated/
betrayed in the cultural becoming: the magic of the spirit. The relationship
between nature and culture intersects with the individual psychic structure in
which the hierarchy between male and female is rooted. It is not the “best of
all possible worlds”, but the place where to find – also through Antigone –
the clues of a dissonance, of an outside that has its incidence in the Hegelian
dialectic.
by Hegel at various moments of his reflection. For Hegel, the Greek tragedy in
general is the terrain from which to draw emblematic figures, not so much of heroes
and heroines, but of moments of passage. Antigone is a sister, rebellious
against the tyrant’s law, a symbol of the passage from one symbolic universe
to another. Indicating the tragedy on one side and the magic on the other, this
paper aims to focus on the resistance in the unconscious of a symbolic translated/
betrayed in the cultural becoming: the magic of the spirit. The relationship
between nature and culture intersects with the individual psychic structure in
which the hierarchy between male and female is rooted. It is not the “best of
all possible worlds”, but the place where to find – also through Antigone –
the clues of a dissonance, of an outside that has its incidence in the Hegelian
dialectic.
Tipologia CRIS:
2.1 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
Feminine Tragedy Magic
Elenco autori:
Bonito Oliva, R.
Link alla scheda completa:
Titolo del libro:
The Owl's Flight. Hegel’s Legacy to Contemporary Philosophy