References
- Bloom , Harold . 1989 . Ruin the Sacred Truth: Poetry and Belief from the Bible to the Present 161 Cambridge , Mass. p. Bloom's list is unusually concise, but following the principle of its composition, one can extend it at will. George Steiner, for example, would certainly include into it Adorno, Horkheimer, Marcuse, Benjamin, Proust, Wittgenstein and the whole powerful “witches' brew” which was the German-Jewish cultural milieu of fin-de-siëcle Vienna. There is a strong case to be made on behalf of many others, only now coming into the focus of western, increasingly postmodern, consciousness, with Simmel, Shestov, Lévinas and Derrida arguably the most prominent among them.
- 166 Bloom, p.
- 1968 . What Is Called Thinking 53 Quoted after Martin Heidegger, trans. F.D. Wieck and J.G. Gray (New York, p. See also Shoshana Felman, Writing and Madness, trans. Martha Noel Evans and Felman (Ithaca, NY, 1985), p. 62
- 1984 . Taking Chances: Derrida, Psychoanalysis and Literature ed. Joseph H. Smith and William Kenigen (Baltimore, MD, pp. viii.
- Handelman , Susan A. 1982 . Slayers of Moses 49 Albany , NY pp., 91, 131.
- 148 Bloom, p.
- Ozick , Cynthia . 1984 . Art and Ardour 155 (New York, p.