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Daniel Heller-Roazen : Geheimnisse des al-Jahiz

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In this notebook, philosopher and writer Daniel Heller-Roazen poses the question, "Might language guard something of its own, hidden in everything that is said?" With his mastery of language and its cryptic, coded nature, he dives into the fundamental question and mystery of speech and "text" itself.

Heller-Roazen refers to the ninth-century thinker Al-Ja?i? and his notion of guarding a secret and holding the tongue, and his idea that we need two skills to handle a secret: how not to speak at the wrong time, and how not to lose a secret by divulging it.

A secret affects the bodies' organs and physical being, mainly the tongue and chest, and through a discussion of Al-Ja?i?'s methods, the life of the secret is revealed: from how it traverses the body, seeping into every movement and gesture, every glance of the secret keeper, to how, once it escapes the tongue into a single ear, it is no longer a secret and becomes something else-public scandal, private shame-or at best passes into another discourse altogether, information. Daniel Heller-Roazen (*1974) is Professor of Comparative Literature at Princeton University.

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Product Details
Hatje Cantz
3775729011 / 9783775729017
Paperback / softback
709.2
01/11/2011
Germany
24 pages
105 x 148 mm, 20 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More