10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «UNHOMELIKE»
Discover the use of
unhomelike in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
unhomelike and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
American Continental Philosophy: A Reader
Unhomelike. Places. Archetictural. Sections. of. Heidegger. and. Freud. DAVID.
FARRELL. KRELL. David Farrell Krell is one of the most influential and original
contributors to American continental philosophy. Yet, in many ways, he is as ...
Walter Brogan, James Risser, 2000
2
The Hermeneutics of Medicine and the Phenomenology of ...
see this more clearly let us turn to yet another possibility of unhomelike being-in-
the- world without illness. To be locked up in prison for years and be exposed to
horrible conditions is another example of unhomelikeness without illness. First ...
3
Archeticture: Ecstasies of Space, Time, and the Human Body
It is as though the willing suspension of disbelief both conjures and quiets the
uncanny, both spurs and neutralizes the unhomelike at once. Freud has to settle
for the paradox "that in literature [Dichtung] much is not unheim- lich that would
be ...
David Farrell Krell, 1997
4
Feminist Phenomenology and Medicine:
I have tried in earlier works to characterize and to a certain extent delineate the
borders of illness experiences, pro- ceeding mainly from the phenomenology of
Heidegger, by way of the concept of“unhomelike being-in-the-world” (Svenaeus ...
Kristin Zeiler, Lisa Folkmarson Käll, 2014
5
Venture Capital at the Crossroads
It is as though the willing suspension of disbelief both conjures and quiets the
uncanny, both spurs and neutralizes the unhomelike at once. Freud has to settle
for the paradox "that in literature [Dichtung] much is not unheimlich that would be
if ...
William D. Bygrave, Jeffry A. Timmons, 1992
6
Handbook of Phenomenology and Medicine
First, what is important to stress here is that it is the being-w-the-world of the
person that counts as homelike or unhomelike in the phenomenological theory.
To live in an environment means to interpret it and assign it meaning through
feelings, ...
7
The Archaeology of Home: An Epic Set on a Thousand Square ...
The Germans have a word for it: unheimlich, translated as uncanny, but meaning
literally unhomelike. The unheimlich is more than frightening, it's disturbing, an
effect that occurs in the presence of doubt as to whether an apparently living ...
8
Dimensions of Health and Health Promotion
Whether being locked up in prison results in unhomelike being-in-the-world or
not depends partly on the world that the person is thrown into (its factual and
cultural characteristics) and partly on the way he or she projects this given world
of ...
Lennart Nordenfelt, Per-Erik Liss, 2003
9
Heidegger toward the Turn: Essays on the Work of the 1930s
Unhomelike. The figure of the stream as "the absconding one" (der Schwin-
dende) in Holderlin's late stream-hymns, and in particular the figure of the Ister (
the upper Danube, called by the Roman name for its lower course) in its
regressive ...
10
Princeton Alumni Weekly
The German word for uncanny is unlieimlicli — literally, “unhomelike" — and I
think what made me laugh was that the university I call home, when presented
through the lens of Hollywood filmmaking, was rendered absurdly unhomelike.
3 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «UNHOMELIKE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
unhomelike is used in the context of the following news items.
Stanya Kahn visits the suburbs for Grand Arts' Don't Go Back to Sleep
Kahn's film seems equal parts fertile fantasy and critical evocation of the Freudian unheimlich — the quite literally unhomelike home. But the head trip is worth ... «Pitch Weekly, May 14»
Minecraft & The Uncanny
In German, the uncanny is unheimlich, which translates literally to the “unhomely” or “unhomelike.” Here homely has a double meaning. First homely is the ... «Gamasutra, Aug 12»
"Coraline": Even Stephin Merritt can't save SF Playhouse's …
Gaiman's novel is frightening because it dabbles in what Freud famously called the Uncanny, or the Unheimlich (literally "unhomelike") — the creeping ... «SF Weekly, Dec 10»