3
0
📍 Noticed
Prosaics and Other Provocations: Empathy, Open Time, and the Novel
by Gary Saul Morson
Sponsored
Synopsis
This far-ranging study develops Morson's concept of "prosaics," which stresses the importance of ordinary events and the novel's unique ability to portray them. Arguing that time is open and contingency real, Morson develops a "prosaics of process" showing how some masterpieces have found an ...
This far-ranging study develops Morson's concept of "prosaics," which stresses the importance of ordinary events and the novel's unique ability to portray them. Arguing that time is open and contingency real, Morson develops a "prosaics of process" showing how some masterpieces have found an alternative to structure. His well-known pseudonym Alicia Chudo, the inventor of "misanthropology," explores the disturbing philosophical content of laughter, disgust, and even empathy. Northwestern University's most popular professor, Morson attributes declining student interest in literature to current teaching methods. He argues in favor of showing how literature fosters empathy with people unlike ourselves. Ever playful, Morson explores the relation of games to wit, which expresses the power of the mind to triumph over contingency in the social world.
You May Also Like
Travel Picks
View All
West With Giraffes
Lynda Rutledge
The Lost Voices of Pompeii: Life and Death on Pompeii’s Final Day
Dr. Jess Venner
The Wide Wide Sea: Imperial Ambition First Contact and the Fateful Final Voyage of Captain James Cook
Hampton Sides
Come Fly with Me
Camille Di Maio
Grape Juice: An 831 Stories Romance
Eliza Dumais
The Paris Novel
Ruth Reichl