These
are some of the ideas we will be discussing and please don’t worry
about not having read the books as examples of the philosophical
ideas can be found in a variety of books. Where we will be discussing
ideas in class we’ll make sure you have the hand outs a week or so
before.
There
are 2 ways we can look at literature in ethics.
1)
Literature viewed through the lens of ethics This will focus on
literature/fiction generally and the philosophical questions arising
from it/them. Questions such as can fiction teach us anything at all
given that it is ‘just’ fiction? Should a work of art have a
moral Should censorship be allowed in some circumstances? Does the
view of the author count? Should a work of fiction have a moral
content and if so how does this affect the reader.
2)
Ethics illuminated by examples from literature We would look closely
at philosophical ethics to see how problems raised there are
reflected and dealt with in the literary texts studied. Philosophical
texts will be on my reading list, not just novels. Extracts of each
provided.
Books
… extracts to illustrate the ethical and philosophical topics. Full
bibliography at the bottom of page.
Primary
texts.
Turn
of the screw. Henry James
Brothers
Karamazov Dostoyevsky
Candide
Voltaire
Secondary
texts.
Anna
Karenina Tolstoy
Mother’s
milk Edward St Aubin or similar for example of irony and/or humour
Extracts
from various philosophical papers, commentaries and books on
literature, fiction and ethics.
Week
1 Jenni General introduction: Inside and outside of a text. Authors,
narrators and readers. Authorial intent and ambiguity in Turn of the
screw by Henry James.
Week
2. Martyn. Post modernism and the text. Ambiguity, post modernism
relativism in relation to James’ Turn of the screw. Possibly
William James ---- you can use other texts too if you want to.
Week
3 Jenni Moral panic in James’ Turn of the screw. How this bears
relation to the last two weeks discussions.
Week
4. Jenni Can we be moved by emotions in novels if they are
fictitious?
Examples
from Anna Karenina. Example of comedy from Mother’s Milk
Example
of sadness from Anna Karenina and psychical distancing Terry Diffy
and other theories on why/how we are moved by fiction. Colin
Radcliffe How can we be moved by the fate of Anna Karenina
.
Week
5. Martyn Psychology as evidence. Why does fiction affect us so
deeply? The psychological effects of fiction on the reader. Aristotle
on tragedy ----appeals to us all ----- cathartic. 2. Ethical issues
addressed in tragedy. Examples of tragedy that illustrate this point.
We can use any texts we like for these two weeks as the topic
concerns all fiction.
Week
6 Jenni can we learn morality from fiction? ‘Is it only make
believe’ Kendall Walton. Can it make us a better person. Can we
learn how to treat others with consideration? If so then what affect
does fiction about evil or evil deeds have on us.
Week
7 Martyn. Moral attitudes of the writer, a look at what shapes their
outlook.: Henry James, Dostoyevsky and Voltaire. And does it matter?
Evil authors and evil deeds. Some examples I thought of; VS Naipaul
–misogynist, Salman Rushdie – apparently a blasphemer, Ayn Rand
right wing racist, anti gay etc
William
James consciousness, no grand narrator, fragmented, morality versus
perhaps Dostoyevsky.
Week
8. Martyn Brothers Karamazov. An example of fiction that ‘speaks
volumes to or emotions and makes us think about morality. The
question in Bros K is Can there be morality without religion Ivanov’s
pamphlet/prose----The Grand Inquisitor.
Week
9 Jenni Philosophical ideas and philosophical ethics in fiction. Can
we learn about ethical theories/values from a work of literature?
Brothers Karamazov. Utilitarian ideas in the speech where Alyosha
says he would not torture one child to save the world. Also
Voltaire’s Candide and the philosophical idea of The best of all
possible worlds and Leibniz’s theory of optimism.
Week
10 Martyn. How morality informs the texts either the point the author
is trying to get across to the reader or the author’s own morality.
Can we see evidence in literature of different forms of morality in
different eras and times? What was Voltaire trying to say in
‘Candide’?
A
wide range of (mainly) novels and (maybe) other literature will be
examined in this course and any previous reading you have done will
be helpful. There is no need to read all of the books mentioned as
handouts will be given out in advance.
If
you would like to familiarise yourself with the subject of ethics and
literature here are some interesting books. (only suggestions)
Dick
Beardsmore Learning from a Novel. Royal Institute of Philosophical
Lectures U1 1971-2.
Beardsmore,
RW. "Literary Examples and Philosophical Confusion"
(1984).Philosophy and Literature. Ed. Griffiths, A. P. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. 59-73
Booth,
W. (1988). The company we keep: An ethics of fiction / Wayne C.
Booth. Berkeley,[Calif.] ; London: University of California Press.
Carroll
Noël. Ethics, , pp. 350-387. Art and Ethical Criticism: An Overview
of Recent Directions of Research. Vol. 110, No. 2 (January 2000). The
University of Chicago Press. URL:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/233273
George,
S. (2005). Ethics, literature, and theory : An introductory reader /
edited by Stephen K. George. (2nd ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman &
Littlefield.
Halliwell,
S. (1986). Aristotle's Poetics / Stephen Halliwell. London:
Duckworth.
Nussbaum,
M. (1992). Love's knowledge : Essays on philosophy and literature /
Martha C. Nussbaum. New York: Oxford University Press.
Pojman,
L. (1999). The moral life : An introductory reader in ethics and
literature. New York; Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Radford,
Colin. (1975) Why are we moved by the Fate of Anna Karenina?
Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society for the systematic study of
philosophy. Supplementary Volume XL1X, p's 67-80. London: Williams
and Norgate.
Tolstoy,
Leo. (1994). What Is Art? London: Duckworth.
Walton,
Kendall. (1990). Mimesis as Make-Believe: On the Foundation of the
Representational Arts. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Wilkinson,
Robert. (Ed). (1991). Theories of Art and Beauty. I Milton Keynes:
Open University Press.
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