Despite a consensus that literature has some positive relation to ethics, the precise nature of this relationship remains mysterious. This paper attempts to explain both the connection and the inability to specify it by positing that the ethical productivity of literature is necessarily indirect or coded; that is, we gain ethical knowledge from literature only when we do not know what, or even that, we are learning. The paper considers three ways in which literature can be ethically instructive: literary form, which accustoms us to ways of thinking that defy logical reduction but are essential to ethics; literary language, which awakens us to the morally pertinent fact that expression does not always conform to intention or register reality; and the literary representation of communal life, which reveals the limitations of the subject's moral autonomy and the philosophical theories based on that autonomy.
Contents
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedDistance Learning: How Literature Teaches EthicsLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedÄsthetik der Faszination? Überlegungen und BeispieleLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedMedusa's Gaze and the Aesthetics of FascinationLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedZur Frage der Präsenz ‘starker Frauen’ und der Dekonstruktion des Patriarchats in der Englischen Renaissancetragödie unter besonderer Berücksichtigung von John Websters The Duchess of MalfiLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedBeyond Beginning: Walter Scott's (Para)textualisation of ScottishnessLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication Unlicensed‘Not all of them are Paddies’: Irish-Americans and the (Un-/Re-)Embracing of Irish IdentityLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedChristina Sanchez, Consociation and Dissociation: An Empirical Study of Word-family Integration in English and GermanLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedHistorical Thesaurus of the Oxford English Dictionary, with additional material from A Thesaurus of Old English, ed. Christian Kay, Jane Roberts, Michael Samuels & Irené WotherspoonLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedPhilip Durkin, The Oxford Guide to EtymologyLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedBritons in Anglo-Saxon England, ed. Nick HighamLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedThe Old English Boethius. An Edition of the Old English Versions of Boethius's De Consolatione Philosophiae, ed. Malcolm Godden and Susan Irvine with a chapter on the Metres by Mark Griffith and contributions by Rohini JayatilakaLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedLászló Sándor Chardonnens, Anglo-Saxon Prognostics, 900–1100: Study and TextsLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedChristoph Schubert, Raumkonstitution durch Sprache: Blickführung, Bildschemata und Kohäsion in Deskriptionssequenzen englischer TexteLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedUdo J. Hebel, Einführung in die Amerikanistik/American StudiesLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedCivilizing America: Manners and Civility in American Literature and Culture, ed. Dietmar SchlossLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedJohn Wrighton, Ethics and Politics in Modern American PoetryLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedNine Eleven: Ästhetische Verarbeitungen des 11. September 2001, ed. Ingo Irsigler & Christoph Jürgensen; 9/11 als kulturelle Zäsur: Repräsentationen des 11. September 2001 in kulturellen Diskursen, Literatur und visuellen Medien, ed. Sandra Poppe, Thorsten Schüller & Sascha SeilerLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedPatrick D. Murphy, Ecocritical Explorations in Literary and Cultural StudiesLicensedFebruary 24, 2011
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedEingegangene SchriftenLicensedFebruary 24, 2011