From the beginning, Augustine's "Confessions" presents itself as a dialogue with God. Taking a cue from Ludwig Feuerbach’s "The Essence of Christianity [Das Wesen des Christentums]," this dialogue can easily be dismissed as a projection of the self. This would imply that the divine otherness is nothing more than a mirror of one’s own fears and preferences. “Does this critique,” I asked myself in this piece, “really do justice to a position like that of Augustine?” For a long time, I did not know how to approach what I had — provisionally — called Augustine’s dialogue with God. It appeared to me that Augustine, in an accidental and indirect way, had re-invented the Platonic dialogue and had turned it into a new Christian genre. “It...
One cannot understand the literary form of a dialogue without understanding its philosophical projec...
Book XI of his Confessions contains Augustine’s celebrated ‘treatise’ on time. In reality, however, ...
From opening books to read them, through the continuous effort at opening one’s heart to God, to the...
From the beginning, Augustine's "Confessions" presents itself as a dialogue with God. Taking a cue f...
My general thesis is that Confessions is written for an audience which Augustine uses as selfobjects...
This essay is intended as a guide for beginning readers of Augustine, for teachers charged with help...
Compositions moved Augustine, and nowhere is that more evident than in his Confessions. I argue that...
[In] order to discover what the author was aiming at in writing this final correction of his own wor...
This article is concerned with the critique of representation in art found in Augustine’s Confession...
In this article, I explore a pedagogical strategy for teaching Augustine’s Confessions to undergradu...
This paper tackles three questions: (1) why did Augustine choose the literary genre of the philosoph...
Augustine’s Confessions detail the Catholic philosopher’s reflection on his faith journey, a journey...
This paper discusses possible biblical allusions and omissions in Augustine’s Confessions, arguing t...
En las investigaciones de Foucault sobre la genealogía del sujeto moderno destaca la falta del análi...
Augustine’s accounts of his so-called mystical experiences in conf. 7.10.16, 17.23, and 9.10.24 are ...
One cannot understand the literary form of a dialogue without understanding its philosophical projec...
Book XI of his Confessions contains Augustine’s celebrated ‘treatise’ on time. In reality, however, ...
From opening books to read them, through the continuous effort at opening one’s heart to God, to the...
From the beginning, Augustine's "Confessions" presents itself as a dialogue with God. Taking a cue f...
My general thesis is that Confessions is written for an audience which Augustine uses as selfobjects...
This essay is intended as a guide for beginning readers of Augustine, for teachers charged with help...
Compositions moved Augustine, and nowhere is that more evident than in his Confessions. I argue that...
[In] order to discover what the author was aiming at in writing this final correction of his own wor...
This article is concerned with the critique of representation in art found in Augustine’s Confession...
In this article, I explore a pedagogical strategy for teaching Augustine’s Confessions to undergradu...
This paper tackles three questions: (1) why did Augustine choose the literary genre of the philosoph...
Augustine’s Confessions detail the Catholic philosopher’s reflection on his faith journey, a journey...
This paper discusses possible biblical allusions and omissions in Augustine’s Confessions, arguing t...
En las investigaciones de Foucault sobre la genealogía del sujeto moderno destaca la falta del análi...
Augustine’s accounts of his so-called mystical experiences in conf. 7.10.16, 17.23, and 9.10.24 are ...
One cannot understand the literary form of a dialogue without understanding its philosophical projec...
Book XI of his Confessions contains Augustine’s celebrated ‘treatise’ on time. In reality, however, ...
From opening books to read them, through the continuous effort at opening one’s heart to God, to the...