Virtue and Romance: Allan Bloom on Jane Austen and Aristotelian Ethics (Critical Essay) Virtue and Romance: Allan Bloom on Jane Austen and Aristotelian Ethics (Critical Essay)

Virtue and Romance: Allan Bloom on Jane Austen and Aristotelian Ethics (Critical Essay‪)‬

Modern Age 2010, Wntr, 52, 1

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

Within Allan Bloom's last book, Love and Friendship, stands a chapter on Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. (1) The chapter is short--just over seventeen pages in length--but that it exists at all in a volume that features Plato and Rousseau may be surprising to many. Nevertheless, Bloom offers an incisive if unorthodox interpretation of Austen's novel, ultimately suggesting that Austen advances a position that features a unique combination of modern romantic love and ancient friendship. That the translator of Emile sees echoes of modern romanticism in Austen's books is hardly to be wondered at, for her works display many themes that are reminiscent of Rousseau: marriage is the foundation of society and for most, the source of meaning and purpose in life; social barriers such as class often present themselves as unjust obstacles to romantic desire; chastity is the prerequisite of strong romantic attachment; differences between males and females are augmented rather than minimized: the rural is superior to the urban; sentiment tends to be predominant. What is perhaps unexpected, though, is Bloom's insistence on "Austen's classical preferences," on her appearance "as a partisan of Aristotelian rationalism against the dominant principles of modernity," and on her desire "to celebrate classical friendship as the core of romantic love." (2) Without claiming that Austen actually read Aristotle, we may accept and even extend Bloom's claim that there is a strong Aristotelian element in her work. Indeed, Bloom attributes to Austen a unique and daring synthesis between modern marriage and classical friendship, but does not think that her attempt to reconcile these elements wholly succeeds. Nevertheless, his refutation does not take into account that Austen has anticipated and answered his objections in her fiction. We may, therefore, accept Bloom's interpretation of Austen while rejecting his evaluation.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2010
January 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
28
Pages
PUBLISHER
Intercollegiate Studies Institute Inc.
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
206.6
KB

More Books Like This

A Preface to Jane Austen A Preface to Jane Austen
2014
The Cambridge Introduction to Jane Austen: Second Edition The Cambridge Introduction to Jane Austen: Second Edition
2015
Jane Austen A Critical Study (Encyclopaedia Of World Great Novelists Series) Jane Austen A Critical Study (Encyclopaedia Of World Great Novelists Series)
2014
Encyclopaedia of World Great Novelists (Jane Austen) Encyclopaedia of World Great Novelists (Jane Austen)
2004
The Improvement of the Estate The Improvement of the Estate
2020
Jane Austen: The Novels Jane Austen: The Novels
1998

More Books by Modern Age

Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged: From Romantic Fallacy to Holocaustic Imagination. Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged: From Romantic Fallacy to Holocaustic Imagination.
2004
The Great Gatsby. (An Article from Modern Age 2007, Spring, Vol. 49, (2) The Great Gatsby. (An Article from Modern Age 2007, Spring, Vol. 49, (2)
2007
Ortega Y Gasset's "Revolt" and the Problem of Mass Rule (Critical Essay) Ortega Y Gasset's "Revolt" and the Problem of Mass Rule (Critical Essay)
2004
Honesty in the Face of Delusion (Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies) (Book Review) Honesty in the Face of Delusion (Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies) (Book Review)
2010
The Essential Guardini (Romano Guardini's Works) The Essential Guardini (Romano Guardini's Works)
2005
Rene Girard's Accusation: Intellectuals Are the Castrators of Meaning: "After Language, Man Is Becoming Deconstructed": Eugenics Is a Form of Human Sacrifice: "Sexuality Is the Problem, Not the Solution": The Ruthless Ideas of a Great Thinker (Documentation) (Interview) (Reprint) Rene Girard's Accusation: Intellectuals Are the Castrators of Meaning: "After Language, Man Is Becoming Deconstructed": Eugenics Is a Form of Human Sacrifice: "Sexuality Is the Problem, Not the Solution": The Ruthless Ideas of a Great Thinker (Documentation) (Interview) (Reprint)
2008