Though James Joyce was steeped in philosophy and humanism, he has received too little attention from contemporary philosophers in comparison to many of the other titans of modernist fiction. This book probes the possibilities for thinking philosophically about Joyce's masterpiece, Ulysses, presenting readings by renowned scholars such David Hills, Garry L. Hagberg, Vicki Mahaffey, Martha C. Nussbaum, Sam Slote, Wendy J. Truran, and Philip Kitcher, who also provides an introduction to the volume that considers broader themes and situates Ulysses as a work of philosophical interest. For the central characters of Ulysses--Leopold Bloom, Molly Bloom, and Stephen Dedalus, "How to live?" is an urgent question. Each must either start anew, or attempt to recover lost paths. Chapters plumb the depths of the philosophical quandaries that present themselves to these characters--reflections on death and overcoming disgust, Leopold Bloom's evocations of conscious thought, the dominance of vision in our thinking about the senses, identity, and the possibility of revising one's values are only a handful of the subjects covered in the volume. Ulysses is an intrinsically and deeply philosophical work, and these readings provide new inroads and firm orientation for Joyce's project. Readers will come away with renewed appreciation for one of our greatest works of literature in the English language, and deepened understanding of Joyce's attempt to offer alternative ways of structuring and enriching the world of our experience.
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Introduction, Philip Kitcher Chapter 1. Between Detachment and Disgust: Bloom in Hades, Martha Nussbaum Chapter 2. A Portrait of Consciousness: Joyce's Ulysses as Philosophical Psychology, Garry Hagberg Chapter 3. Feeling Ulysses: An Address to the Cyclopean Reader, Vicki Mahaffey and Wendy J. Truran Chapter 4. Ulysses May Be a Legal Fiction, Sam Slote Chapter 5. Doing Dublin in Different Voices, David Hills Chapter 6. Something Rich and Strange: Joyce's Perspectivism, Philip Kitcher
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This excellent volume does an admirable job of examining Ulysses from a philosophical perspective without, as too often happens, becoming reductionist in its approach to either philosophy or literature...The six essays it contains...work together in a number of complex and extremely suggestive ways...The volume thus creates the feeling of an intelligent conversation between friends (each with their own distinctive point of view) rather than a forced attempt to cover a series of topics.... [T]his volume is to be highly commended for its discovery of a genuinely philosophic approach to Ulysses, one that does not attempt to dig out the hidden 'message' buried in the writing, but that understands that the writing itself is the message...As this volume has admirably shown, Joyce's philosophy is not a lesson he included somewhere in Ulysses, it is Ulysses.
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"This excellent volume does an admirable job of examining Ulysses from a philosophical perspective without, as too often happens, becoming reductionist in its approach to either philosophy or literature...The six essays it contains...work together in a number of complex and extremely suggestive ways...The volume thus creates the feeling of an intelligent conversation between friends (each with their own distinctive point of view) rather than a forced attempt to cover a series of topics.... [T]his volume is to be highly commended for its discovery of a genuinely philosophic approach to Ulysses, one that does not attempt to dig out the hidden 'message' buried in the writing, but that understands that the writing itself is the message...As this volume has admirably shown, Joyce's philosophy is not a lesson he included somewhere in Ulysses, it is Ulysses." -- Mind
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Selling point: Serves as the first English-language book to explore the philosophical aspects of Ulysses Selling point: Focuses on the questions about human life that occupy all reflective people Selling point: Written clearly and accessibly by eminent scholars and philosophers, including Philip Kitcher, David Hills, Martha Nussbaum, and Garry Hagberg, among others Selling point: Provides new insights and orientation to those still perplexed by the novel
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Philip Kitcher, John Dewey Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, Columbia University Philip Kitcher is John Dewey Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus at Columbia. He is the author of numerous books, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the first recipient of the Prometheus Prize, awarded by the American Philosophical Association for work in expanding the frontiers of Science and Philosophy. He has been named a "Friend of Darwin" by the National Committee on Science Education, and received a Lannan Foundation Notable Book Award for Living With Darwin (Oxford University Press, 2007). In 2019, he was awarded the Rescher Medal for contributions to systematic philosophy.
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Selling point: Serves as the first English-language book to explore the philosophical aspects of Ulysses Selling point: Focuses on the questions about human life that occupy all reflective people Selling point: Written clearly and accessibly by eminent scholars and philosophers, including Philip Kitcher, David Hills, Martha Nussbaum, and Garry Hagberg, among others Selling point: Provides new insights and orientation to those still perplexed by the novel
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780190842260
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
422 gr
Høyde
146 mm
Bredde
225 mm
Dybde
19 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
280

Redaktør

Biographical note

Philip Kitcher is John Dewey Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus at Columbia. He is the author of numerous books, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the first recipient of the Prometheus Prize, awarded by the American Philosophical Association for work in expanding the frontiers of Science and Philosophy. He has been named a "Friend of Darwin" by the National Committee on Science Education, and received a Lannan Foundation Notable Book Award for Living With Darwin (Oxford University Press, 2007). In 2019, he was awarded the Rescher Medal for contributions to systematic philosophy.