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This book offers a philosophical exploration of the extraordinary depth of Herman Charles Bosman’s humorous short stories. It argues that while his stories are entirely readable as light fiction, they are also revelatory of the nature of literary art. Their art allows us to experience the depth that ordinary life possesses.
The book sets its argument in the context of a discussion of the depth of fiction in relation to truth, and consequently of the relation of the charms of the worlds of fiction to the reality of everyday life.
Herman Charles Bosman and the Depth of Humorous Storytelling is essential reading for philosophers of literary aesthetics as well as for scholars in literary studies, narrative theory, and comparative literature.
Jeremy Barris is a professor of philosophy at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia, USA
List of contents
1: Introduction: Life and Contexts.- 2: Bosman and Existential Grace.- 3: The Depth of Artistic Fiction.- 4: A General Overview of the Nature and Depth of Bosman’s Humor.- 5: Specifics of Bosman’s Humorous Storytelling and Its Charmed World.- 6: Bosman’s Charmed World as a Contemplative Space That Brings Out the Meaningfulness of Things.- 7: The Charmed World and the Sense of Sense Itself.- 8: The Truth of the Story’s Content and the Reality of the Reader Themselves.
About the author
Jeremy Barris is a professor of philosophy at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia, USA
Summary
This book offers a philosophical exploration of the extraordinary depth of Herman Charles Bosman’s humorous short stories. It argues that while his stories are entirely readable as light fiction, they are also revelatory of the nature of literary art. Their art allows us to experience the depth that ordinary life possesses.
The book sets its argument in the context of a discussion of the depth of fiction in relation to truth, and consequently of the relation of the charms of the worlds of fiction to the reality of everyday life.
Herman Charles Bosman and the Depth of Humorous Storytelling is essential reading for philosophers of literary aesthetics as well as for scholars in literary studies, narrative theory, and comparative literature.