ABSTRACT

Jane Austen and the Ethics of Description demonstrates that Elizabeth Bennet and her creator are misunderstood, and often unrecognized, geniuses of moral philosophy, but not simply because of their virtue or wit or natural skills in game theory. The engine driving the moral judgement and growth of Austen’s protagonists consists of a particular and not well-understood ability to reason by description, a skill which we moderns must recover and remaster in order to negotiate the complexities of contemporary life. The forms of rational description this book derives from Austen will be of great interest not only to literary critics and theorists, but also to philosophers and anyone interested in ethics, the dynamics of power, and practical reasoning.

Written in a clear style, the book is for those who love Austen and for those who want to understand how we should reason about our lives, how we should understand power, social conflict, and our own motives and prejudices. It is a literary analysis, a philosophical argument, and a practical guide to ethical thinking.

part I|92 pages

Jane Austen and the Powers of Description

chapter 1|9 pages

Disciplines of Description

chapter 2|11 pages

Rereading Ignorance into Sense

chapter 4|20 pages

Frank and Impertinent

Paradiastolic Descriptions

chapter 6|13 pages

Fanny's Garden Thoughts

chapter 7|7 pages

Reasoning by Description

chapter 8|13 pages

Coda

“Part Hawk, Part Man”

part II|73 pages

The Apprehension of Power and Life

chapter |4 pages

Prologue

chapter 9|13 pages

The Cook and the Count

A Psychological Anthropology of Tyranny

chapter 10|13 pages

Is Power Coercive?

chapter 11|14 pages

A Parable of Action and Event

chapter 12|10 pages

The Afflictions of Life

Montale's Poetic Description of Flux

chapter 13|11 pages

What Is a Life?

chapter 14|6 pages

A Concluding Postscript