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RESULTSSearching enCompass books for 'George Steiner'... We found 2 matches.
George Steiner
Lessons of the Master When we talk about education, we tend to avoid the rhetoric of 'mastery', with its erotic and inegalitarian overtones. But the charged personal encounter between master and disciple is precisely what interests George Steiner in this book, a sustained reflection on the infinitely complex and subtle interplay of power, trust and passions in the most profound sorts of pedagogy. Based on Steiner's Norton Lectures on the art and lore of teaching, 'Lessons of the Masters' evokes a host of exemplary figures including Socrates and Plato, Jesus and his disciples, Virgil and Dante, Heloise and Abelard, Tycho Brahe and Johann Kepler, the Baal Shem Tov, Confucian and Buddhist sages, Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, Nadia Boulanger, and Knute Rockne. Pivotal in the unfolding of Western culture are Socrates and Jesus, charismatic masters who left no written teachings, founded no schools. In the efforts of their disciples, in the passion narratives inspired by their deaths, Steiner sees the beginnings of the inward vocabulary, the encoded recognitions of much of our moral, philosophical and theological idiom. He goes on to consider a diverse array of traditions and disciplines, recurring throughout, to three underlying themes: the master's power to exploit his student's dependence and vulnerability; the complementary threat of subversion and betrayal of the mentor by his pupil; and the reciprocal exchange of trust and love, of learning and instruction between master and disciple.
Harvard University Press 2003 hbk £12.95 ISBN 0-674-01207-0
George Steiner
My Unwritten Books In this fiercely original and audacious work, George Steiner tells of seven books which he did not write. Because intimacies and indiscretions were too threatening. Because the topic brought too much pain. Because its emotional or intellectual challenge proved beyond his capacities. The actual themes range widely and defy conventional taboos: the torment of the gifted when they live among, when they confront, the very great; the experience of sex in different languages; a love for animals greater than for human beings; the costly privilege of exile; a theology of emptiness. Yet a unifying perception underlies this diversity. The best we have or can produce is only the tip of the iceberg. Behind every good book, as in a lit shadow, lies the book which remained unwritten, the one that would have failed better.
Phoenix 2009 pbk £8.99 ISBN 978-0753825693
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth234
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/jan/19/society
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