|
''Language speaks'' (in the original German ''Die Sprache spricht''), is a famous saying by Martin Heidegger. Heidegger first formulated it in his 1950 lecture ''Language'' (''Die Sprache''),〔Lyon (2006) pp.128-9〕 and frequently repeated it in later works.〔Philipse (1998) p.205〕 Adorno expressed a related idea when he said that language "acquires a voice" and "speaks itself."〔Carsten Strathausen (2003) The look of things: poetry and vision around 1900, Volume 8, Issue 126, p.148-51〕 ==The ''Language'' lecture== The saying was first formulated by Heidegger in the lecture ''Language'' (''Die Sprache'') in memory of Max Kommerell, first delivered on October 7, 1950 at the Bühlerhöhe building.〔Heidegger (1959) ''Unterwegs zur Sprache'', references section, p.259, quote: translation by Albert Hofstadter in Heidegger (1971), p.xxv, quote: 〕 The lecture was translated in English by Albert Hofstadter in the 1971 Heidegger collection ''Poetry, Language, Thought''.〔''Language'', in Heidegger (1971) pp.187-ff〕 Quoting a Hamann's 1784 letter to Herder, Heidegger talks of language as an "abyss." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Language speaks」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|