The Poetics of Distance: Kierkegaard's Abraham

Søren Kierkegaard's existential identification with the story of Abraham in Genesis 22 is well known. In 1852, Kierkegaard imagined himself waking one morning to the thought: ‘What you are experiencing is similar to the story of Abraham’, only to add almost in the same breath: ‘But he did not u...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Literature and theology
Main Author: Danta, Chris (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Oxford University Press 2007
In: Literature and theology
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Summary:Søren Kierkegaard's existential identification with the story of Abraham in Genesis 22 is well known. In 1852, Kierkegaard imagined himself waking one morning to the thought: ‘What you are experiencing is similar to the story of Abraham’, only to add almost in the same breath: ‘But he did not understand Abraham or himself’. The correct rhetorical name for this uncanny act of identification, which attributes the incomprehensibility of the present to something in the distant past, is metalepsis. In this article I claim that Kierkegaard thereby presents Abraham in Fear and Trembling as the metaleptic figure par excellence. Kierkegaard's Abraham, I argue, denominates a special type of figurative substitution in which the inconsolability of the present is expressed via a poetics of distance.It is no small sacrifice to part with the assurance that life and immortality have been brought to light, and to be reduced to the condition of the great spirits of old who looked yearningly to the horizon of their earthly career wondering what lay beyond: but I cannot think the conviction that immortality is man's destiny indispensable to the production of elevated and heroic virtue and the sublimest resignation. –– George Eliot, The Letters, 1842
ISSN:1477-4623
Contains:Enthalten in: Literature and theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1093/litthe/frm009