
Against Better Judgment
In treating human minds and bodies as systems and machines, Enlightenment philosophers did not account for actions that may be undermotivated, contradictory, or self-betraying. A number of authors, from Daniel Defoe and Samuel Johnson to Jane Austen and John Keats, however, took up the phenomenon in inventive ways. Thomas Manganaro traces how English novelists, essayists, and poets of the period sought to represent akrasia in ways philosophy cannot, leading them to develop techniques and ideas distinctive to literary writing, including new uses of irony, interpretation, and contradiction. In attempting to give shape to the ways people knowingly and freely fail themselves, these authors produced a new linguistic toolkit that distinguishes literature’s epistemological advantages when it comes to writing about people.
- Alaotsikko
- Irrational Action and Literary Invention in the Long Eighteenth Century
- Kirjailija
- Thomas Salem Manganaro
- ISBN
- 9780813947297
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 363 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 30.5.2022
- Kustantaja
- UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA PRESS
- Sivumäärä
- 240