Skip to content

Science center information library

Online Public Access Catalog

  • Book Bag: 0 items (Full)
  • Home
  • Services
  • News
  • Help
  • Introduce
  • Contact
Advanced
  • Home
  • Reading for peace? Literature...
  • Cite this
  • Text this
  • Email this
  • Print
  • Export Record
    • Export to RefWorks
    • Export to EndNoteWeb
    • Export to EndNote
  • Save to List
  • Add to Book Bag Remove from Book Bag
  • Permanent link
Reading for peace? Literature as activism – an investigation into new literary ethics and the novel

Reading for peace? Literature as activism – an investigation into new literary ethics and the novel

Literary ethicists like Dorothy J Hale and narratologists like James Phelan have argued that the reading process makes literary novels worthy of ethical investigation. That is, it’s not just a book’s content – which may debate norms and values – but the process of reading that inspires the reader to...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shady E. Cosgrove
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Wollongong 2023
Subjects:
Literary ethics
Online Access:https://dlic.huc.edu.vn/handle/HUC/5575
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
  • Holdings
  • Description
  • Comments
  • Similar Items
  • Staff View
Description
Summary:Literary ethicists like Dorothy J Hale and narratologists like James Phelan have argued that the reading process makes literary novels worthy of ethical investigation. That is, it’s not just a book’s content – which may debate norms and values – but the process of reading that inspires the reader to consider Other points of view. This alterity, new ethicists argue, can lead to increased empathy and thus more thoughtful decision-making within the ‘actual’ world. In fact, Hale (2007: 189) says empathetic literary training is a ‘pre-condition for positive social change’. This may work well theoretically, but what practical issues does it hold for social activists? How useful can literature actually be in the face of dire social issues? Can we ‘read’ our way out of poverty and aggressive military intervention? And what would it mean to develop an activism based on reading and empathy? This paper will examine these questions using a framework based on the work of Hale and Phelan. (Hale, 2007)

Similar Items

  • Museum ethics /
    by: Edson Gary
    Published: (1997)
  • Literary aesthetics /
    by: Singer Alan
    Published: (2000)
  • The American tradition in literature /
    by: Perkins George
    Published: (1999)
  • The moral of the story : An introduction to ethics /
    by: Rosenstand Nina
    Published: (2000)
  • Active skills for reading : Book 1 /
    by: Anderson, Neil J.
    Published: (2007)

Ha noi university of culture

Science center information library

Contact

Information Center, Library - 418 La Thanh Street - Dong Da District - Hanoi - Vietnam

(+84) 2438.511.971

lic@huc.edu.vn

Contact us

Trải nghiệm thư viện trên điện thoại!

Copyright © 2022 - Thư viện Trường Đại học Thương Mại. All Rights Reserved