Lexington Books
Pages: 272
Trim: 5¾ x 9
978-0-7391-0149-0 • Paperback • September 2000 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
Henry T. Edmondson III is Professor in the Department of Government at Georgia College & State University.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Literature and Public Ethics
Chapter 2 Henry James' The Princess Casamassima:Revolution and the Preservation of Culture
Chapter 3 Love, Law, and Rhetoric: The Teachings of Francesca in Dante's Inferno
Chapter 4 Aliens Are Us? Walker Percy's Response to Carl Sagan on Wandering and Wondering
Chapter 5 Shakespeare's Henry V and the Act of Ethical Reflection
Chapter 6 Rabelais and Pascal: Wise Kings and Anguished Men
Chapter 7 Chinua Achebe and the Nature of Social Change
Chapter 8 A Place in the World: Delinquency and the Search for Liberty in Cervantes' Rinconete and Cortadillo
Chapter 9 The Great-Souled Woman: Jane Austen as Public Moralist
Chapter 10 True and False Liberalism: Stolypin and His Enemies in Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's August 1914
Chapter 11 The Alchemy of Power and Idealism: Dostoevsky's "Grand Inquisitor"
Chapter 12 Democratic Envy in Sinclair Lewis' It Can't Happen HereI
Chapter 13 Natural Right, Conventional Right, and Setting Things Aright: Joseph Conrad's The Secret Sharer
Chapter 14 The Beauty of Middle-Class Virtue: Willa Cather's O Pioneers
Chapter 15 Robert Penn Warren's Brother to Dragons: Complicity and the Beginning of Innocence
Chapter 16 Fatherhood and Friendship in the Modern Regime: Jean Dutourd's The Springtime of Life
Chapter 17 Mark Twain on Democratic Statesmanship: A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
Chapter 18 Pagan Virtue and Christian Charity: Flannery O'Connor on the Moral Contradictions of Western Culture
[A] noteworthy addition to the growing literature on the relationship between art and politics.
— American Political Science Review