The Faust Myth

Subtitle
Religion and the Rise of Representation

Author David Hawkes

This book argues that the world has sold its soul to Satan. To make this case, Hawkes undertakes a careful, precise analysis of what the terms "soul" and "Satan" have meant historically. Focusing on the story of Dr. Faustus, which he argues is the definitive myth of the modern era, Hawkes claims that the autonomous, individual human subject has become dissolved in a sea of representation. The system of performative signs that we call "the market" functions today as an openly magical power, existing only in our minds but ruling the world nonetheless, and systematically extinguishing the essence of humanity. Hawkes describes how this situation has arisen using a wide-ranging, transnational account of the versions of Faust presented by Marlowe, Calderon, Milton, Moliere, Goethe, Byron, Dostoevsky, Wilde, Thomas Mann, Ngugi Wa'Thiongo and Salman Rushdie. Literary scholars, historians, philosophers and even economists will find fascination and instruction in this comprehensive, original book.

Bio

David Hawkes is a professor in the Department of English at Arizona State University.


Praise for this book

'The Faust Myth' contains an astonishing thesis, which Hawkes presents with astonishing boldness... The book is, more than any other academic book I have encountered, a sensation... the pervasive application of his thesis to an extraordinary range of philosophical and (international) literary texts spanning several centuries is a testimony to his erudition, and his critical virtuosity and brilliance. But the almost monomaniacal power of this treatment may also cause uneasiness...

Ian MacAdam Renaissance Quarterly
Cover of "The Faust Myth" featuring yellow text and a blue background
Date published
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN
978-1403975591

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