ABSTRACT

Literature, Interpretation and Ethics argues for the centrality of hermeneutics in the context of ongoing debates about the value and values of literature, and about the role and ethics of literary study. Hermeneutics is the endeavor to understand the nature of interpretation, as it poses vital questions about how we make sense of works of art, our own lives, other people and the world around us.

The book outlines the contribution of hermeneutics to literary study through detailed accounts of role of interpretation in the work of key thinkers such as Martin Heidegger, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Paul Ricoeur, Umberto Eco, Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas. It also illustrates problems of interpretation posed by specific literary texts and films, emphasising how our interpretive acts also entail ethical engagements. The book develops a ‘hermeneutics of (guarded) trust’, which calls for attention to the agency of art without surrendering critical vigilance.

Through a series of forays into theoretical texts, literary works and films, the book contributes to contemporary debates about critical practice and the cultural value. Interpretation, it suggests, is always fallible but it is also essential to our place in the world, and to the importance of the humanities.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Forays

part I|52 pages

Literature and the Hermeneutics of Trust

chapter 161|17 pages

Does Literature Matter?

chapter 2|18 pages

The Hermeneutics of Suspicion and the Hermeneutics of Trust

Ricoeur, Gadamer, Camus

part II|50 pages

Misreading/Overreading

chapter 684|15 pages

Overreading

Intentions, Mistakes and Lies

chapter 5|18 pages

Reading and Overreading

Camus's Whales

chapter 6|15 pages

Reading Violence, Violent Reading

Levinas and Hermeneutics

part III|67 pages

Reading/Ethics

chapter 1187|16 pages

Truth, Ethics, Fiction

Responding to Plato's Challenge

chapter 8|12 pages

Trauma, Poststructuralism and Ethics

chapter 9|15 pages

Ethics, Stories and Reading

chapter 10|17 pages

Limits of Reading, Overreading and Ethical Reading

Albert Camus's La Chute

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

Forays into Good Reading, Bad Reading, Misreading, Overreading and the Hermeneutics of (Guarded) Trust