Fr. 134.40

Literary Studies and Human Flourishing

English · Hardback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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This volume, part of the Humanities and Human Flourishing series, asks the question: what do literary scholars contribute to the often science-focused fields related to happiness and flourishing? The essays in this volume reflect on how the kinds of literary research the contributors themselves are doing, the kinds of work to which they are personally committed, might become part of an interdisciplinary conversation about human flourishing.

List of contents










  • Series Editor's Foreword by James O. Pawelski

  • Introduction by James F. English and Heather Love

  • Part I: Happy Reading: Literature Without the Academy

  • Chapter 1: "Bibliotherapy and Human Flourishing"

  • Leah Price

  • Chapter 2: "Bad Habits on Goodreads? Eclecticism vs Genre-Intolerance among Online Readers"

  • James F. English, Scott Enderle, and Rahul Dhakecha

  • Part II: Flourishing Beyond Reason: Literature's Augmented Realities

  • Chapter 3: "Flourishing Spirits"

  • Chris Castiglia

  • Chapter 4: "Sage Writing: Facing Reality in Literature"

  • David Russell

  • Part III: Flourishing in Crisis: The Poetics of Disaster

  • Chapter 5: "Literature of Uplift"

  • David James

  • Chapter 6: "Black Ecological Optimism and the Problem of Human Flourishing"

  • Sonya Posmentier

  • Part IV: Non-Normative Flourishing: Disability and Aging

  • Chapter 7: "Literary Study, the Hermeneutics of Disability, and the Eudaimonic Turn"

  • Janet Lyon

  • Chapter 8: "Wise Old Fools: Positive Geropsychology and the Poetics of Later-Life Floundering"

  • Scott Herring

  • Part V: Positive Affect: Redescription and Repair

  • Chapter 9: "Therapeutic Redescription"

  • Beth Blum

  • Chapter 10: "Merely Ameliorative: Reading, Critical Affect, and the Project of Repair"

  • Heather Love



About the author

James F. English is John Welsh Centennial Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania and founding Faculty Director of the Price Lab for Digital Humanities. His main fields of research are the sociology and economics of culture; the history of literary studies as a discipline; and contemporary British fiction, film, and tele­vision. His books include Comic Transactions: Literature, Humor, and the Politics of Community in Twentieth-Century Britain (1994), The Economy of Prestige: Prizes, Awards, and the Circulation of Cultural Value (2005), and The Global Future of English Studies (2012). He is currently studying the history of rating and ranking systems in the arts.

Heather Love teaches English and Gender Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of Feeling Backward: Loss and the Politics of Queer History, the editor of a special issue of GLQ on Gayle Rubin ("Rethinking Sex"), and the coeditor of a special issue of Representations ("Description across Disciplines"). Love has written on topics including comparative social stigma, compulsory happiness, transgender fiction, the ethics of observation, spinster aesthetics, reading methods in literary studies, and the figure of the tragic lesbian. Her most recent book, Underdogs: Social Deviance and Queer Theory, was published in October 2021.

Product details

Authors James F. (John Welsh Centennial Professor English
Assisted by James F. English (Editor), James F. (John Welsh Centennial Professor of English English (Editor), Heather Love (Editor), Heather (Professor of English Love (Editor)
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 11.01.2023
 
EAN 9780197637227
ISBN 978-0-19-763722-7
No. of pages 248
Series The Humanities and Human Flourishing
The Humanities and Human Flour
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative literary studies

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