Ethics, Aesthetics, and the Beyond of Language

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State University of New York Press, Aug 2, 2010 - Literary Criticism - 243 pages
This book explores the relationship between literature and ethics, showing how literature and art work to open up a part of ethics that resists traditional philosophy. Focusing on three American Romantic texts—Wieland, "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," and The Marble Faun—Robert Hughes demonstrates how each dramatizes the ethical, psychological, and existential imperative to put the experience of our own traumatic limits (death, mortality, and being) into poetic language. To develop the theoretical stakes of these literary readings, Hughes also draws on four twentieth-century continental thinkers—Jacques Lacan, Martin Heidegger, Emmanuel Levinas, and Alain Badiou—each of whom, in his own way, proposed aesthetics or art as an approach to this dimension of ethics. The book also points to an overlooked common lineage, descending from German Romanticism, between American Romanticism and contemporary post-Romantic continental thought: a shared supposition about the limits of reason as a mode of presenting the essence of art and ethics, and a shared faith in the promise of literature to speak to, or open up, this subjective space of foundational ethics
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Fearful Pleasures and the Nightmare of History
13
Sleepy Hollow and the Nightmare of History
16
From Trauma to the Uncanny
26
The Moral of the Story and What It Goes to Prove
34
From Art to Ethics
39
3 Browns Wieland and the Ethical Circumscription of Death
61
The Voice of Art and the Call to Being
85
Art and the Transcendence of Solitude
113
Ethics Enigma and Address in The Marble Faun
137
Badious Ethical Subject and the Event of Art as Trauma
159
Word After Word
185
Notes
189
Works Cited
215
Index
225
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About the author (2010)

Robert Hughes is Assistant Professor of English at the Ohio State University and coeditor (with Kareen Ror Malone) of After Lacan: Clinical Practice and the Subject of the Unconscious, also published by SUNY Press.

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