{"title":"Literary Interventions in Justice: A Symposium","authors":"K. Kirkpatrick, R. McGregor, Karen Simecek","doi":"10.33134/eeja.265","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The purpose of this symposium is to explore the ways in which literature, broadly construed to include poetry and narrative in a variety of modes of representation, can change the world by providing interventions in justice. Our approach foregrounds the relationship between the activity demanded by some individual literary works and some categories of literary work on the one hand and the way in which those works can make a tangible difference to social reality on the other. We consider three types of active literary engagement: doing philosophy, ideological critique, and necessary rather than contingent performance. Kate Kirkpatrick opens with Kamel Daoud’s The Meursault Investigation (2013), reading the narrator as not only a critic of colonial and postcolonial discourse but also a literary exemplar of the search for justice when it is difficult to know to what level of explanation to attribute its absence. Rafe McGregor demonstrates how the final season of Prime Video’s The Man in the High Castle (2015–19) makes a radical break from the previous three, exposing the misanthropy at the core of right-wing populism and calling for a fundamentally democratic response from the left. Finally, Karen Simecek argues that poetry in performance has a potentially reparative function for the ethically lonely – the vulnerable, the oppressed, and the persecuted – in society.","PeriodicalId":53570,"journal":{"name":"Estetika : The Central European Journal of Aesthetics","volume":"26 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Estetika : The Central European Journal of Aesthetics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.33134/eeja.265","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
The purpose of this symposium is to explore the ways in which literature, broadly construed to include poetry and narrative in a variety of modes of representation, can change the world by providing interventions in justice. Our approach foregrounds the relationship between the activity demanded by some individual literary works and some categories of literary work on the one hand and the way in which those works can make a tangible difference to social reality on the other. We consider three types of active literary engagement: doing philosophy, ideological critique, and necessary rather than contingent performance. Kate Kirkpatrick opens with Kamel Daoud’s The Meursault Investigation (2013), reading the narrator as not only a critic of colonial and postcolonial discourse but also a literary exemplar of the search for justice when it is difficult to know to what level of explanation to attribute its absence. Rafe McGregor demonstrates how the final season of Prime Video’s The Man in the High Castle (2015–19) makes a radical break from the previous three, exposing the misanthropy at the core of right-wing populism and calling for a fundamentally democratic response from the left. Finally, Karen Simecek argues that poetry in performance has a potentially reparative function for the ethically lonely – the vulnerable, the oppressed, and the persecuted – in society.
本次研讨会的目的是探讨文学的方式,广泛地解释为包括诗歌和叙事的各种表现模式,可以通过提供干预正义来改变世界。我们的方法一方面强调了某些文学作品和某些文学作品类别所要求的活动与这些作品对社会现实产生切实影响的方式之间的关系。我们考虑了三种类型的积极文学参与:做哲学,意识形态批判,必要而不是偶然的表演。凯特·柯克帕特里克(Kate Kirkpatrick)以卡梅尔·达乌德(Kamel Daoud)的《默尔索调查》(The Meursault Investigation, 2013)作为开篇,将叙述者解读为不仅是殖民和后殖民话语的批评家,也是在难以知道该将正义的缺失归因于何种解释水平时寻求正义的文学典范。雷夫·麦格雷戈展示了Prime Video出品的《高堡人》(the Man in the High Castle, 2015-19)的最后一季是如何与前三季彻底决裂的,他揭露了右翼民粹主义核心的厌恶人类,并呼吁左翼做出根本性的民主回应。最后,Karen Simecek认为,诗歌的表演对社会中那些道德上孤独的人——脆弱的、受压迫的和受迫害的人——具有潜在的修复功能。