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Short Stories and Political Philosophy : Power, Prose, and Persuasion.

This book examines the intersection of fictional narratives and political philosophy, focusing specifically on the use of short stories to teach the classic works of political philosophy. It is a resource for scholars and teachers of politics, philosophy, and literature.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Hale, Kimberly Hurd
Otros Autores: McCranor, Timothy, Michels, Steven, Nichols, Mary P., Peabody, Bruce, Sardo, Michael Christopher
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Lexington Books, 2018.
Colección:Politics, literature, & film.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Short Stories and Political Philosophy; Series page; Short Stories and Political Philosophy: Power, Prose, and Persuasion; Copyright page; Contents; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1; Introduction; Political Philosophy and Fiction: The Case for Congruity; Common Ends, Different Means; Short Stories: Advantages of Form and Function; The Endemic Tradition of Storytelling; Disrupting Disciplinary Boundaries; Existing Scholarship and the Contributions of this Volume; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 2; Big Data for the Good Life; Self-Knowledge and the Good Life
  • Social Interactions, Observation, and JusticeHacking the Human Condition: Enter Big Data; Digital Natives; Surveillance and the Human Condition; The Economics of Big Data; Increased Data, Better Algorithms, More Perfect Matches; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 3; Paolo Bacigalupi's "Pop Squad" and the Examined Life Worth Living; The Symposium and the Search for Immortality; Children of the Body; Children of the Soul; Meaningless Life; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 4; All the World's a Cage; Meaning and the Masses; Soul Meets Body; The End of Art; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 5
  • Conflicting Moral GoodsFirst Incident: Going to Court; Second Incident: Meeting Major de Spain; Third Incident: Barn Burning; Families, Justice, and Truth-telling; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 6; From the Iron Cage to the "Waters of Babylon"; The World of Babylon: Exile, Grief, and Renewal; Mapping the Apocalyptic; The Fate of Our Times: Rationalization, Disenchantment, and the Modern Age; POLITICS, RELIGION, AND SCIENCE AS VOCATIONS; Religion, Science, and Disenchantment; Post-Apocalypse Now: To Babylon and Beyond; Escaping the Iron Cage; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 7
  • "The Terrible Justice of Reality"From Utopia to Everyday Injustice: "Omelas" as Psychomyth; First Dilemma of Responsibility: Who is Responsible for Omelas?; Second Dilemma of Responsibility: Is it Responsible to Walk Away?; Omelas and Us; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 8; Kinship, Community, and the Bureaucratic State; The Archetypal Modern Man; A Matter of Patriotism; Berry and the Development of American Agrarian Thought; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 9; "The Incarnation of My Native Land"; Henry James' "Pandora"; "Pandora" as a Complement to American Political Thought
  • American Political Thought and the Literary ImaginationThe Paradox of Liberalism; The Lady of Infinite Mirth; "Active Patriotism" and Moral Seriousness; Her House Left Out More People Than It Took In; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 10; Jumping at Our Reflection; "Classics in some category:" "The Lottery" and Republic; Cultural Universals and the Birth of Tragedy; Whose Justice?; Fairness, Legality, Legitimacy, Democracy; History and Hysteria; Blame, Obligation, Intervention; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Chapter 11; Conclusion; Short Fiction's Pedagogical Edge