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Adam Zachary Newton has written 5 work(s)
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Cover for 9780823263516 Cover for 9780823263523 Cover for 9780299208905 Cover for 9780791447833 Cover for 9780791447840 Cover for 9780521651066 Cover for 9780521658706 Cover for 9780674600874 Cover for 9780674600881
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Hardcover:

9780823263516, titled "To Make the Hands Impure: Art, Ethical Adventure, the Difficult and the Holy" | Fordham Univ Pr, December 2, 2014, cover price $95.00

Paperback:

9780823263523, titled "To Make the Hands Impure: Art, Ethical Adventure, the Difficult and the Holy" | Fordham Univ Pr, December 2, 2014, cover price $35.00

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Product Description: "The Elsewhere." Or, midbar-biblical Hebrew for both "wilderness" and "speech." A place of possession and dispossession, loss and nostalgia. But also a place that speaks. Ingeniously using a Talmudic interpretive formula about the disposition of boundaries, Newton explores narratives of "place, flight, border, and beyond...read more

Hardcover:

9780299208905 | Univ of Wisconsin Pr, July 15, 2005, cover price $45.00 | About this edition: "The Elsewhere.

cover image for 9780791447833
Product Description: The Fence and the Neighbor traces the contours of two thinkers, Emmanuel Levinas and Yeshayahu Leibowitz, who crossed the divide between Talmud and philosophy proper. Adam Zachary Newton shows how the question of nationalism that has so long haunted Western philosophy the question of who belongs within its fence, and who outside has long been the concern of Jewish thought and its preoccupation with law, limits, and the place of Israel among the nations...read more (view table of contents, read Amazon.com's description)

Hardcover:

9780791447833 | State Univ of New York Pr, December 1, 2000, cover price $72.50 | About this edition: The Fence and the Neighbor traces the contours of two thinkers, Emmanuel Levinas and Yeshayahu Leibowitz, who crossed the divide between Talmud and philosophy proper.

Paperback:

9780791447840 | State Univ of New York Pr, December 1, 2000, cover price $31.95 | About this edition: The Fence and the Neighbor traces the contours of two thinkers, Emmanuel Levinas and Yeshayahu Leibowitz, who crossed the divide between Talmud and philosophy proper.

Hardcover:

9780521651066 | Cambridge Univ Pr, September 1, 1999, cover price $134.99

Paperback:

9780521658706 | Cambridge Univ Pr, September 1, 1999, cover price $54.99

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The ethics of literature, formalists have insisted, resides in the moral quality of a character, a story, perhaps the relation between author and reader. But in the wake of deconstruction and various forms of criticism focusing on difference, the ethical question has been freshly negotiated by literary studies, and to this approach Adam Newton brings a startling new thrust. His book makes a compelling case for understanding narrative as ethics. Assuming an intrinsic and necessary connection between the two, Newton explores the ethical consequences of telling stories and fictionalizing character, and the reciprocal claims binding teller, listener, witness, and reader in the process. He treats these relations as defining properties of prose fiction, of particular import in nineteenth- and twentieth-century texts. Newton's fresh and nuanced readings cover a wide range of authors and periods, from Charles Dickens to Kazuo Ishiguro and Julian Barnes, from Herman Melville to Richard Wright, from Joseph Conrad and Henry James to Sherwood Anderson and Stephen Crane. An original work of theory as well as a deft critical performance, Narrative Ethics also stakes a claim for itself as moral inquiry. To that end, Newton braids together the ethical-philosophical projects of Emmanuel Levinas, Stanley Cavell, and Mikhail Bakhtin as a kind of chorus for his textual analyses--an elegant bridge between philosophy's ear and literary criticism's voice. His work will generate enormous interest among scholars and students of English and American literature, as well as specialists in narrative and literary theory, hermeneutics, and contemporary philosophy. (view table of contents)

Hardcover:

9780674600874 | Harvard Univ Pr, March 1, 1995, cover price $70.00 | About this edition: The ethics of literature, formalists have insisted, resides in the moral quality of a character, a story, perhaps the relation between author and reader.

Paperback:

9780674600881 | Reprint edition (Harvard Univ Pr, September 1, 1997), cover price $28.00

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