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Criticism

Neo-Hegelianism and F.H. Bradley’s Absolute

February 24, 2018

Note: the following article on Neo-Hegelianism and F.H. Bradley’s Absolute is a modified excerpt (pp. 53-56) from my doctoral dissertation, “Time is Everything with Him”: The Concept of the Eternal Now in Nineteenth-Century Gothic, which can be downloaded (for free) from the repository of the Tampere University Press. For a list of my other academic publications, see the list on the main website.

Introduction

Neo-Hegelianism is the branch of idealism that is historically most pertinent to the Victorian era. As the name implies, this school of thought draws from the works of the German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel.

Typical representatives of British Neo-Hegelianism were Hutcheson Stirling, in his The Secret of Hegel (1865), the brothers Edward and John Caird, in several works in the late Victorian era – such as An Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion (1880) – and also F. H. Bradley, in works such as Appearance and Reality (1893) and Essays on Truth and Reality (1914).

Bradley’s Absolute: “No Truth which Is entirely True”
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Review of The Yellow Bar

February 22, 2018

The Yellow Bar: The Basics

The Yellow Bar, by John Falch, is a novel of historical fiction describing the Japanese invasion of the Philippines, during WW2. The reader follows the story mostly from the perspective of Pepot, the youngest son of a rural family who has to deal with the repercussions of the military occupation. Obviously enough, some events and personal stories are fictionalized, but the general context is accurate.

The plot starts a few years before the invasion, describing how Pepot’s family managed to escape poverty by selling food and drinks to people passing by their house. Then it proceeds to show how their “rural middle class” (in lieu of a better word) dream shattered. The invaders occupied not only their country but also their house, forcing them to become servants. It’s a story of surviving, waiting, and hoping.

the yellow bar
The Yellow Bar is essentially a story of survival
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Review of Blood Stained Tea

February 18, 2018

Blood Stained Tea, by Amy Tasukada, is the first novel of a series called “The Yakuza Path”. As the name implies, the plot of Blood Stained Tea unfolds in modern-day Japan (Kyoto, to be precise). The local Yakuza syndicate, the traditional Japanese organized crime, struggles to maintain control of the city, as a competitor group of Koreans attempt a takeover. Nao, a young tea merchant and a former (sort of) member of the Yakuza, tries to balance between his family loyalty and his feelings for Saehyun, a prominent member of the competitor gang.

Blood Stained Tea
Kyoto is the backdrop for Blood Stained Tea
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