Reading a novel about a dying person and the people attending the dying, one can not only reflect upon the moral involvement between the literary characters depicted, but also upon the way in which the reader takes the position of a "bystander" in this scene. In two novels, The Death of Ivan Ilyich by Tolstoy and The Big Ward by the Dutch author Jacoba van Velde, this moral involvement can be interpreted as a form of "compassion". Martha Nussbaum’s concept of "compassionate imagination" offers a perspective on the way in which the reader can be involved in this literary depiction of the dying. However, the Aristotelian criteria that Nussbaum proposes for the rational judgement of compassion and her ambitions that literature can "raise socie...
The humanities in general, and literature in particular – Martha Nussbaum argues – deserve a leading...
This study explores the formation and evolution of Mary Shelley’s philosophy of sympathy, one which ...
Death has intrigued and even inspired fear in many. Since fiction mimics life, it is no wonder that ...
Reading a novel about a dying person and the people attending the dying, one can not only reflect up...
This version is B-version of the pre-reviewed article appeared in the journal Problems of Literary G...
We often hear that literature’s ability to elicit empathy validates its ethical value in society and...
International audienceThis paper aims at presenting and discussing one of Martha Nussbaum’s main con...
One important aspect of Nussbaum´s thesis on the moral value of literature concerns the power of lit...
Although rejecting Christian dogma, George Eliot retained, throughout her life, a strong sympathy fo...
Two picture books titled The Island, one written and illustrated by Armin Greder and the other writt...
Martha Nussbaum’s argument that literature cultivates 'powers of imagination that are essential to c...
Reason for the study: Clinicians use conserving care in their therapeutic decisions. Discussing deat...
In this article we would like to bring to light the importance of Tolstoy as a moral thinker, in vie...
ABSTRACT: This study looks at three popular works of short fiction, by Leo Tolstoy, Ambrose Bierce, ...
This paper is a study of compassion and intersubjectivity in the Philippine metrical romance Don Jua...
The humanities in general, and literature in particular – Martha Nussbaum argues – deserve a leading...
This study explores the formation and evolution of Mary Shelley’s philosophy of sympathy, one which ...
Death has intrigued and even inspired fear in many. Since fiction mimics life, it is no wonder that ...
Reading a novel about a dying person and the people attending the dying, one can not only reflect up...
This version is B-version of the pre-reviewed article appeared in the journal Problems of Literary G...
We often hear that literature’s ability to elicit empathy validates its ethical value in society and...
International audienceThis paper aims at presenting and discussing one of Martha Nussbaum’s main con...
One important aspect of Nussbaum´s thesis on the moral value of literature concerns the power of lit...
Although rejecting Christian dogma, George Eliot retained, throughout her life, a strong sympathy fo...
Two picture books titled The Island, one written and illustrated by Armin Greder and the other writt...
Martha Nussbaum’s argument that literature cultivates 'powers of imagination that are essential to c...
Reason for the study: Clinicians use conserving care in their therapeutic decisions. Discussing deat...
In this article we would like to bring to light the importance of Tolstoy as a moral thinker, in vie...
ABSTRACT: This study looks at three popular works of short fiction, by Leo Tolstoy, Ambrose Bierce, ...
This paper is a study of compassion and intersubjectivity in the Philippine metrical romance Don Jua...
The humanities in general, and literature in particular – Martha Nussbaum argues – deserve a leading...
This study explores the formation and evolution of Mary Shelley’s philosophy of sympathy, one which ...
Death has intrigued and even inspired fear in many. Since fiction mimics life, it is no wonder that ...