Poets, Princes, and Private Citizens: Literary Alternatives to Postmodern PoliticsThis collection of original and insightful essays was written by teachers seeking to restore literature as a powerful teaching tool in the undergraduate classroom. This book rejects postmodern theorizing, opting instead to assert that great poets, playwrights, and novelists self-consciously intended to impart compelling moral and political lessons. The essays focus on fundamental questions such as: What is justice? What does it mean to be a good human being? What are the strengths and weaknesses of a particular form of government? and, How are we to understand and resolve the tensions between private affections and public responsibilities? This is important reading for anyone concerned about the impact of postmodern literary analysis. |
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Obsah
Don Quixote and Christian Imperialism | 3 |
Virtue Honor and Reputation Machiavellis Appropriation of Christianity in the Rape of Lucrezia | 21 |
Modern Revolution | 39 |
Master and Man in Melvilles Benito Cereno | 41 |
Politics of Hatred in A Tale of Two Cities | 63 |
The SeaWolf Nature Versus Morality | 75 |
The Pestilent Intellect Camuss PostChristian Vision | 91 |
Love in the Ruins | 119 |
Lost in the Cosmos Walker Percys Analysis of American Restlessness | 169 |
Paul Scotts Raj Quintet Real Politics in Imagined Gardens | 191 |
Literature and the Permanent Questions | 211 |
Nature and Convention in King Lear | 213 |
The Famous Victories of William Shakespeare The Life of Henry the Fifth | 235 |
Moral Education in Jane Austens Emma | 271 |
Friendship and Divine Justice in Homers Iliad | 289 |
305 | |
Family and Politics in Aristophanes | 121 |
Rannery OConnor and the Limits of Justice | 143 |
About the Contributors | 309 |
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Achilles action Aeschylus American appears Aristophanes Austen authority become begins believe blacks called Camus cause character Christian claim comes common concern consider conventional criticism death Delano desire divine Don Quixote Emma English example existence experience fact father feel final French give glory Henry Henry's Holinshed honor human imagined important individual justice kind king Larsen Lear Lear's least limits live Machiavelli Marxism matter means moral nature never novel particular peace Percy perhaps philosopher play political possible present Press problem question reader reason respect responsibility reveals rule says scene seems sense Shakespeare shows simply Socrates speak speech story suggests things thought tion true truth turns Turpin understanding University virtue vision women York Zeus
Odkazy na túto knihu
Leo Strauss: An Introduction to His Thought and Intellectual Legacy Thomas L. Pangle Obmedzený náhľad - 2006 |