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How Literature Changes the Way We Think

How Literature Changes the Way We Think

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Description
The capacity of the arts and the humanities, and of literature in particular, to have a meaningful societal impact has been increasingly undervalued in recent history. Both humanists and scientists have tended to think of the arts as a means to represent the world via imagination. Mack maintains that the arts do not merely describe our world but that they also have the unique and underappreciated power to make us aware of how we can change accustomed forms of perception and action. Mack explores the works of prominent writers and thinkers, including Nietzsche, Foucault, Benjamin, Wilde, Roth, and Žižek, among others, to illustrate how literature interacts with both people and political as well as scientific issues of the real world. By virtue of its distance from the real world-its virtuality-the aesthetic has the capability to help us explore different and so far unthinkable forms of action and thereby to resist the repetition and perpetuation of harmful practices such as stereotyping, stigma, exclusion, and the exertion of violence.
Product details
Edition:
1
Number of Pages:
208
Release Date:
2012-02-02
Publication Date:
2012-02-02
Publisher:
Bloomsbury 3PL
Languages:
Original: English
ISBN10:
1441103201
ISBN13:
9781441103208
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
431 g
Height:
145 cm
Width:
222 cm
Thickness:
16 cm
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