Search Books
Allegories of Kingship: Cal… Charlotte Perkins Gilman's …

What's Hecuba to Him?: Fictional Events and Actual Emotions (Literature and Philosophy)

Author Eva M. Dadlez
Publisher Penn State University Press
Category Literary Criticism
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
31.46 34.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $7.27

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
Author(s)Eva M. Dadlez
ISBN / ASIN0271016515
ISBN-139780271016511
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank3,889,387
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Fiction transports us. We inhabit new worlds in our imagination, adopt perspectives not our own, and even respond emotionally to persons and events that we know are not real.

The very nature of our emotional engagement with fiction, says E. M. Dadlez, attests to the possibility of its moral significance, just as the nature of our imaginative engagement makes us collaborators in the creation of the worlds we imagine.

This book engages contemporary debate over the seeming irrationality or inauthenticity of our emotional response to fiction, examining the many positions taken in this debate and arguing that we can understand the relation between cognition and emotion without devaluing our emotional responses to fiction. It takes Hamlet's famous query as the first step in an analytic philosophical inquiry and, by considering some of the answers that derive from that question, arrives at a set of necessary conditions for an emotional response to fiction.

What Hamlet's player feels for Hecuba, proposes Dadlez, is no more illusory than what we feel for Hamlet; that the actor weeps for Hecuba reflects both our capacity to envision and understand a seemingly limitless variety of human situations—to empathize with others—and the capacity of fiction to facilitate such understanding. What's Hecuba to Him? is an enticingly written work that opens an entire philosophical arena to literary scholars and illuminates the significance that literature has for our moral life.

The Origins of English Nonsense
View
The Elements of Writing About Literature and Film
View
Aeneid of Virgil, The: A Verse Translation By Rolfe Hu…
View
The Essential C. S. Lewis
View
C. S. Lewis at the Breakfast Table and Other Reminisce…
View
Aviation: From Our Earliest Attempts at Flight to Tomo…
View
Mortals and Others, Volume 1 : American Essays, 1931-1…
View
The Centre of Things: Political Fiction in Britain fro…
View
How to Read Literature Like a Professor: A Lively and …
View