Orpheus Gaze - M. Blanchot
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概要
Orpheus descends into the underworld. His music charms the gods. They grant him one condition: he may bring Eurydice back to the light, but he must not look back at her. He looks. She vanishes.
For most readers, this is a story about impatience, about the fatal weakness of turning around. For Maurice Blanchot—one of the most elusive and essential thinkers of the twentieth century—it is something else entirely. It is the secret truth of what happens when you write.
In this episode, we follow Blanchot into the myth. We ask: What is the "gaze" that ruins the work but also makes it possible? Why must Orpheus lose Eurydice twice? And what does it mean to say that writing begins not with mastery, but with a forbidden look into the dark?
Featuring a reading of the central chapter from Blanchot's The Space of Literature, this episode is an invitation to rethink everything you thought you knew about inspiration, sacrifice, and the strange, nocturnal source of art.
Perfect for: Writers, artists, readers, and anyone who has ever felt that the thing they were making demanded something from them they couldn't quite name.