Vladimir Jankélévitch
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vladimir Jankélévitch (31 August 1903 in Bourges–6 June 1985 in Paris) was a French philosopher and musicologist. Association Vladimir Jankélévitch, 48 rue de Fresnes L'Hay-les-Roses France.
[edit] Biography
Jankélévitch was the son of Russian parents, who had emigrated to France. In 1922 he started studying philosophy at the École normale supérieure in Paris, under Professor Bergson. From 1927 to 1932 he taught at the Institut Français in Prague, where he wrote his doctorate on Schelling. He returned to France in 1933, where he taught at the Lycée du Parc in Lyon and at many universities, including Toulouse und Lille. In 1939 he joined the French Resistance. After the war, in 1951, he was appointed to the chair of Moral Philosophy at the Sorbonne, where he taught until 1978.
The extreme subtlety of his thought is apparent throughout his works where the very slightest gradations are assigned great importance. Jankelevitch, who drew on Platonist, Neoplatonist and Greek patristic sources in establishing his essentially agnostic thought, was resolute in his opposition to German philosophical influence. He was totally opposed to any forgiveness of the crimes of Nazism.
[edit] Bibliography
- 1933: L'Odyssée de la conscience dans la dernière philosophie de Schelling
- 1936: Traité des vertus
- 1938: Gabriel Fauré, ses mélodies, son esthétique
- 1939: Ravel
- 1943: Du mensonge
- 1950: Debussy et le mystère de I'instant
- 1957: Le Je-ne-sais quoi et le presque-rien
- 1960: Le Pur et I'impur
- 1961: La Musique et l'Ineffable, (tr. into English by Caroline Abbate, 2003)
- 1963: L'Aventure, l'Ennui, le Sérieux
- 1966: La Mort (dt. Ausg. Der Tod, Frankfurt a. M., Suhrkamp, 2005) - ISBN 3518584464
- 1967: Le pardon
- 1970: L 'Imprescriptible