<p>“This intelligent, original, and thought-provoking study offers a fresh understanding of Rousseau’s moral and political philosophy from the specific angle of forgiveness.”</p><p>—Laurence Mall, University of Illinois</p>
<p>“A lucid, illuminating contribution to research on the history of modern attitudes towards sentiment and emotion.”</p><p>—Jason Neidleman <i>French Studies</i></p>
<p>“While Rousseau’s conception of natural pity has been the focus of numerous studies attending to issues in his social and political thought, neither anger nor forgiveness has been explored in any great depth. <i>Man or Citizen</i> engages with all the important primary and secondary sources and moves nicely between fiction, autobiography, and social and political texts.”</p><p>—Julia Simon, author of <i>Rousseau Among the Moderns</i></p>
<p>“A well-researched and clearly written study, of interest to scholars of Rousseau, political theory, philosophy, and literature.”</p><p>—<i>XVIII New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century</i></p>
The French studies scholar Patrick Coleman made the important observation that over the course of the eighteenth century, the social meanings of anger became increasingly democratized. The work of Jean-Jacques Rousseau is an outstanding example of this change. In Man or Citizen, Karen Pagani expands, in original and fascinating ways, the study of anger in Rousseau’s autobiographical, literary, and philosophical works. Pagani is especially interested in how and to what degree anger—and various reconciliatory responses to anger, such as forgiveness—functions as a defining aspect of one’s identity, both as a private individual and as a public citizen. Rousseau himself was, as Pagani puts it, “unabashed” in his own anger and indignation—toward society on one hand (corrupter of our naturally good and authentic selves) and, on the other, toward certain individuals who had somehow wronged him (his famous philosophical disputes with Voltaire and Diderot, for example). In Rousseau’s work, Pagani finds that the extent to which an individual processes, expresses, and eventually resolves or satisfies anger is very much of moral and political concern. She argues that for Rousseau, anger is not only inevitable but also indispensable, and that the incapacity to experience it renders one amoral, while the ability to experience it is a key element of good citizenship.
Examines the role of anger and forgiveness in the autobiographical, literary, and philosophical works of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Argues that for Rousseau, anger is an inevitable outcome of social intercourse, and that forgiveness is central to his understanding of subjectivity and hence of moral and political action.
Contents
Introduction
Part I. The Political Significance of Forgiveness and Anger in Rousseau’s Thought: The Dialogues as a Case Study
Chapter 1. The Magnanimous Pardon: A Force to be Reckoned With
Chapter 2. The Philosophes’ Plot and the Frenchman’s Anger
Chapter 3. The Productive Capacities of the Citizen’s Anger
Chapter 4. The Frenchman’s Conundrum
Part II. Private, Interpersonal Forgiveness: The Rousseauvean Intervention
Chapter 5. The Confessions: Saint-Lambert and Rousseau’s Miraculous Reconciliation
Chapter 6. Publicized Anger and the Unforgivable: Reconsidering the Story of the Foundling Hospital
Chapter 7. Forgiveness Among Men and Citizens in Julie
Chapter 8. Émile and Sophie: To forgive or not forgive? That is the Question
Conclusion. Forgiveness Today and Rousseau’s Legacy
Bibliography
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Karen Pagani is Assistant Professor of French and Italian at the University of Texas at Austin.