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Modernist Empathy

Modernist Empathy

  • £93.99


Eve C. Sorum
Cambridge University Press, 6/27/2019
EAN 9781108498722, ISBN10: 1108498728

Hardcover, 280 pages, 23.5 x 15.7 x 1.6 cm
Language: English

This book shows how reading modernist literature gives us a fresh and necessary insight into both the tensions within the empathetic imagination and the idea of empathy itself. Writers such as Thomas Hardy, Ford Madox Ford, Mary Borden, T. S. Eliot, and Virginia Woolf encourage us to enter other perspectives even as they question the boundaries between self and other and, hence, the very possibility of empathy. Eve Sorum maintains that we must think through this complex literary heritage, focusing on the geographic and elegiac modes of the empathetic imagination, and revealing empathy as more fraught, threatening, and even uncanny than it first appears. Modernist Empathy thereby forges a theory of literary empathy as an act not of orientation, but of disorientation, thereby enriching our contemporary understanding of both modernist literature and the concept of literary empathy.

Illustration
Acknowledgments
1. Modernizing empathy, locating loss
2. Disorientation, elegy, and the uncanny
modernist empathy through Hardy
3. Disorienting empathy
World War I and the traumas of perspective-taking
4. Elegizing empathy
Eliot and the subject-object divide
5. Uncanny empathy
Woolf's half-life of objects
Conclusion
performing empathy?
Notes
Works cited
Index.