Description
By far the most perceptive, subtle, and substantive contribution to the philosophy of literature I have read in years. Eldridge succeeds in offering what are (in my view) the most pressing questions a theoretical approach to literature needs to address: Why do people read literature, and what value do literary texts have in our lives? This book can (and should) shape future debate. -- Wolfgang Huemer, University of Parma Richard Eldridge has at least two immensely important talents as a philosopher addressing literary matters: he is very clear and moving in showing the immense consequences of philosophical texts and philosophical problems for cultural life, and he is patient and precise in showing how the writers he admires address these problems and define paths for expressing responsible and responsive modes of subjectivity. In this book, Eldridge also provides the richest theory I know of how literature can be seen as cognitive experience because of its capacities to define 'the fluency, clarity, coherence, and felt aptness of orientation,' which makes possible the pursuit of lives worth living self-reflexively. -- Charles Altieri, Stageberg Professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley, and author of The Particulars of Rapture: An Aesthetics of the Affects After an introduction generally canvassing many understandings of the uses of literature, Richard Eldridge's new book goes on to specify, through a surprising sequence of wonderful texts, the workings of the literary to make and keep fruitful the disturbances of the modern. The attractive tone of educative conversation Eldridge manages throughout opens his chapters to engagement by those at early stages in their recognition of the necessities of literature as well as by those for whom the increase of this knowledge is their daily bread. -- Stanley Cavell, Walter M. Cabot Professor Emeritus of Aesthetics and the General Theory of Value, Harvard University
About the Author
Richard Eldridge is Charles and Harriett Cox McDowell Professor of Philosophy at Swarthmore College. He is the author of The Persistence of Romanticism, An Introduction to the Philosophy of Art, and On Moral Personhood, and is the editor of Beyond Representation, Stanley Cavell, and The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Literature (forthcoming).
Reviews
An important book... Highly recommended. Choice
Book Information
ISBN 9780231144544
Author Richard Eldridge
Format Hardback
Page Count 192
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press