This paper arises from the finding that the radical impregnated Gadamer's philosophical hermeneutics philosopher disappears when the reader becomes the poetry of Celan. With the publication of Who am I and who are you?, Gadamer interprets the twenty poems that make up the cycle of breath Glass of Paul Celan and reflects on the conditions of the understanding of a poem considered airtight.
After outlining some key aspects of the thought of Gadamer, Robert Caner presents the stark contrast between theory and practice in the work of Gadamer and exposes other modes of interpretation that allow an approximation of Celan's poems to match the specific language and of the concrete historical situation from which you intend to say and remember the unspeakable.
This is a book on hermeneutics because he wants to be at once hermeneutic reflects on the understanding from concrete inte...read more