Holding the Self Lightly

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Photos: The Oberlin Review, Penguin Books

Language has adhesive properties…, drawing us together by enabling us to share our stories…. By inviting us into another’s skin, novels encourage us to practice empathy.  And good novels celebrate the myriad complexities of individuals by creating ample room for all characters to have a voice.

Ruth Ozeki, A Tale for the Time Being

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The Novel as Atonement

Photo: Atonement, dir. Joe Wright

It wasn’t only wickedness and scheming that made people unhappy, it was confusion and misunderstanding; above all, it was the failure to grasp the simple truth that other people are as real as you.  And only in a story could you enter into these different minds and show how they had an equal value.

Ian McEwan, Atonement

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The Death of Old Goriot

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Photos: The New Yorker, Penguin Books

Rastignac gives up on his chance for wisdom, but Balzac clearly holds out hope, against considerable odds, for his implied reader.

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The Many Ages of Wisdom

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Picture in your mind a wise man or wise woman.  Chances are you imagined someone of advanced age—Dumbledore not Harry Potter, The Matrix’s Oracle not Trinity.

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Rethinking Liberal Education

Photo: Raphael, The School of Athens (detail), antigonejournal.com

Narrative imagination is an essential preparation for moral interaction. Habits of empathy and conjecture conduce to a certain type of citizenship and a certain form of community: one that cultivates a sympathetic responsiveness to another’s needs, and understands the way circumstances shape those needs, while respecting separateness and privacy.

Martha Nussbaum, Cultivating Humanity

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In Praise of Small Sanities

Photo: CBC Radio

No wise liberal has ever thought that liberalism is all of wisdom…. Liberalism isn’t a political theory applied to life.  It’s what we know about life applied to a political theory.

Adam Gopnick, In Praise of Small Sanities

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Does Wisdom Lean Left?

Photo: CBS News

Wisdom does not “lean left” so much as “lean liberal.”  If wisdom has a party, it is the party of philosophical liberalism and its historic fellow traveler, liberal education.  

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Who’s Afraid of Wisdom?

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Before moving on, I would like to address five ways in which contemporary readers—and academic readers most especially—might be uncomfortable with wisdom as an optic for literary analysis.  

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What is Wisdom?

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Wisdom as I understand it is a capacity for sound judgment with a view to pragmatic action.  Wise judgment is attuned to cognitive complexities in the world and to the ways in which historical and cultural contexts inform diverse systems of value.  Whatever their domain of action, wise practitioners evince high degrees of intellectual humility and empathy, together with a thoroughgoing commitment to fostering the well-being of both one’s self and one’s community.

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A.Ham in the Age of Trump

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Photo: funnyshirts.org

Hamilton continues to resonate because it speaks, consistently and profoundly, to a deep hunger for wisdom in American society today.

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