Description
Robert Lucas Scott’s Reading Hegel: Irony, Recollection, Critique offers a sophisticated analysis of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s philosophical methodology and its applications to literary theory. Through careful examination of three key concepts—irony, recollection, and critique—Scott demonstrates how Hegel’s thinking extends beyond abstract philosophy into the practical realm of textual interpretation.
The book bridges the gap between continental philosophy and literary studies, showing how Hegelian concepts provide valuable tools for understanding narrative structure, historical consciousness, and the dialectical movement of meaning within texts. Scott’s approach emphasizes the dynamic interplay between philosophical rigor and imaginative interpretation, making Hegel’s notoriously difficult ideas more accessible to scholars in both philosophy and literature departments.
Part of the Thinking Literature series, this work contributes to contemporary debates about how philosophical frameworks shape our reading practices and cultural understanding.







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