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General Store I Gene Ouimette 14x11
General Store I Gene Ouimette 14x11

$9.00
Title: General Store I. Artist: Gene Ouimette. Image Size: 13.22in. x 9.95in. Paper Size: 14.00in. x 11.00in.Popular Images has an unparalleled selection of both vintage and modern prints, posters, art prints, photographs and framed imagery. Our selections are ideal for both the office and home and we have over 400,000 images available for search or browsing. Your print is presented on premium, high grade paper and all framed selections are custom made to order. Orders are shipped to both domestic (US) and international locations. Decorate in style with our tasteful selection of modern and historic imagery.
Word Up
Word Up

$0.89
Cities of Words: Pedagogical Letters on a Register of the Moral Life
Cities of Words: Pedagogical Letters on a Register of the Moral Life

$22.00
No one should mistake City of Words for a book about film, though it comments on a number of movies. Nor is it exactly a book on moral philosophy, if you're looking for thorough accounts of differing views of the good or the right. Those who know Cavell's other writings will find familiar ground here, as he keeps returning to old favorites: Emerson, of course, screwball comedy, Shakespeare and melodrama (new to me are some thoughts on Eric Rohmer, Henry James and Max Ophuls).
What the book does deliver is a set of virtuoso variations on the "register of the moral life" that Cavell calls "perfectionism"--the sense of disappointment with the world as it is and the (in principle endless) aspiration to a transformed, better, more desirable state. He finds perfectionist themes all over the philosophical tradition, but he's more interested in the philosophical life than the tradition. For Cavell, the pleasure of the films lies in the way they embody--and invite, or provoke--conversation, the mutual exploration and testing of human souls, and their dramatization of the various ways conversation can go wrong and correct itself.
The book is a summa of sorts: "city of words" is how Cavell describes Plato's Republic and Kant's "kingdom of ends"--that is, the heaven of the philosophers--and to enjoy this, you'll have to be willing to find the entertaining of possibilities to be entertainment enough. As incentive, Cavell offers wonderful scene-by-scene synopses of the films he discusses (although you'll want to watch them for yourself). Mostly, though, it offers an occasion to be in the company of a thoughtful and humane mind--at times, surprisingly enough, your own.
The book is based on a course in Moral Reasoning that Cavell taught for years at Harvard.

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