Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"This is an astute and probing analysis of the patterns of thought that shape literary studies. Surveying the perspectives of both critics and novelists, Dorothy Hale offers a comprehensive anatomy of the belief that literature offers its readers an exemplary encounter with otherness. A must-read for anyone who is interested in the ethics or politics of literature."—Rita Felski, University of Virginia
"The Novel and the New Ethics will be of interest to anyone working in literature, from the nineteenth century to contemporary fiction. But moral philosophers and those interested in the ethical character—or potential—of literature should also find much to enlighten them. Dorothy Hale's approach is undogmatic, her prose sprightly and clear, her judgments fair but shrewd—and, most important, they are not just asserted, but justified."—Maria DiBattista, Princeton University
"In her critique of the new ethical theories raised – some of which have already achieved high degrees of notoriety in academic circles – Hale is indeed very incisive... [The] major takeaway from The Novel and the New Ethics is how Hale powerfully identifies a tradition of Anglo-American novelists who believe that novelistic aesthetics necessitates an ethical engagement with the other."—Manuel J. Sousa Oliveira, Cadernos de Literatura Comparada
"The Novel and the New Ethics is a bold, compelling, and compendious book that should leave researchers plenty of other avenues of inquiry. Not only has Hale written a fascinating literary history, she has offered a definition of the novel as fundamentally driven by ethics that could well reverberate throughout literary criticism."—Frederick W. Feldman, College Literature
"The Novel and the New Ethics is a valuable contribution to modern novel theory that is able to take the most glaring fault line in twentieth-century criticism—the divide between liberal humanism and poststructuralist ideological critique—as the starting point for a unified account of literature's ethical relationship to alterity. In addition to providing an excellent overview of new ethical interest in the novel, Hale's insights will be particularly useful for scholars interested in characterological approaches to the novel, in the relationship of contemporary literature to modernism, and in the enduring legacy of Henry James. The Novel and the New Ethics is also a refreshingly optimistic book, with the imaginative capacity to recast the internecine conflicts of the literary critical establishment as part of a larger cultural aspiration toward an ethical, though ever-faltering, engagement with otherness."—Benjamin Paul, Twentieth-Century Literature
"Recommended."—K. Gale, CHOICE
"When critics seek to offer an account of the novel, they are usually proposing instead a principle of selection. What is intriguing in Hale's works is how explicit, even foundational, she makes this operation.... It is impossible to read this book, in which everyone is closely tied to the practice of critical reading, and not reflect—sometimes uncomfortably, always profitably—on what we, as critical readers, do."—Jesse Rosenthal, Studies in the Novel

Table of Contents
1. The New Ethics and Contemporary Fiction
2. Henry James and the Development of the Novelistic Aesthetics of Alterity
3. Zadie's Smith's On Beauty: An Ethical Aesthetic as the Problem of Perspectivalism
4. J. M. Coetzee's Elizabeth Costello: The Tradition as the Sum of Its Parts
5. The New Ethics in the Academy: The Lesson of the Master, the Master as the Lesson
Coda: Henry James in the Clinician's Office

The Novel and the New Ethics Post45

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    A Hardback by Dorothy J. Hale

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      View other formats and editions of The Novel and the New Ethics Post45 by Dorothy J. Hale

      Publisher: Stanford University Press
      Publication Date: 24/11/2020
      ISBN13: 9780804794053, 978-0804794053
      ISBN10: 0804794057

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "This is an astute and probing analysis of the patterns of thought that shape literary studies. Surveying the perspectives of both critics and novelists, Dorothy Hale offers a comprehensive anatomy of the belief that literature offers its readers an exemplary encounter with otherness. A must-read for anyone who is interested in the ethics or politics of literature."—Rita Felski, University of Virginia
      "The Novel and the New Ethics will be of interest to anyone working in literature, from the nineteenth century to contemporary fiction. But moral philosophers and those interested in the ethical character—or potential—of literature should also find much to enlighten them. Dorothy Hale's approach is undogmatic, her prose sprightly and clear, her judgments fair but shrewd—and, most important, they are not just asserted, but justified."—Maria DiBattista, Princeton University
      "In her critique of the new ethical theories raised – some of which have already achieved high degrees of notoriety in academic circles – Hale is indeed very incisive... [The] major takeaway from The Novel and the New Ethics is how Hale powerfully identifies a tradition of Anglo-American novelists who believe that novelistic aesthetics necessitates an ethical engagement with the other."—Manuel J. Sousa Oliveira, Cadernos de Literatura Comparada
      "The Novel and the New Ethics is a bold, compelling, and compendious book that should leave researchers plenty of other avenues of inquiry. Not only has Hale written a fascinating literary history, she has offered a definition of the novel as fundamentally driven by ethics that could well reverberate throughout literary criticism."—Frederick W. Feldman, College Literature
      "The Novel and the New Ethics is a valuable contribution to modern novel theory that is able to take the most glaring fault line in twentieth-century criticism—the divide between liberal humanism and poststructuralist ideological critique—as the starting point for a unified account of literature's ethical relationship to alterity. In addition to providing an excellent overview of new ethical interest in the novel, Hale's insights will be particularly useful for scholars interested in characterological approaches to the novel, in the relationship of contemporary literature to modernism, and in the enduring legacy of Henry James. The Novel and the New Ethics is also a refreshingly optimistic book, with the imaginative capacity to recast the internecine conflicts of the literary critical establishment as part of a larger cultural aspiration toward an ethical, though ever-faltering, engagement with otherness."—Benjamin Paul, Twentieth-Century Literature
      "Recommended."—K. Gale, CHOICE
      "When critics seek to offer an account of the novel, they are usually proposing instead a principle of selection. What is intriguing in Hale's works is how explicit, even foundational, she makes this operation.... It is impossible to read this book, in which everyone is closely tied to the practice of critical reading, and not reflect—sometimes uncomfortably, always profitably—on what we, as critical readers, do."—Jesse Rosenthal, Studies in the Novel

      Table of Contents
      1. The New Ethics and Contemporary Fiction
      2. Henry James and the Development of the Novelistic Aesthetics of Alterity
      3. Zadie's Smith's On Beauty: An Ethical Aesthetic as the Problem of Perspectivalism
      4. J. M. Coetzee's Elizabeth Costello: The Tradition as the Sum of Its Parts
      5. The New Ethics in the Academy: The Lesson of the Master, the Master as the Lesson
      Coda: Henry James in the Clinician's Office

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