In this Issue
For more than thirty years, Philosophy and Literature has explored the dialogue between literary and philosophical studies. The journal offers fresh, stimulating ideas in the aesthetics of literature, theory of criticism, philosophical interpretation of literature, and literary treatment of philosophy. Philosophy and Literature challenges the cant and pretensions of academic priesthoods through its assortment of lively, wide-ranging essays, notes, and reviews that are written in clear, jargon-free prose.
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Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 32, Number 2, October 2008Table of Contents
- Emotion and the Force of Fiction
- pp. 258-277
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0022
- Rousseau and the Love of Animals
- pp. 293-302
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0020
- Heidegger in Woolf's Clothing
- pp. 303-314
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0016
- Form Affects Content: Reading Jane Austen
- pp. 315-329
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0024
- The Case Against Faction
- pp. 347-358
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0027
- Converts, Uncertainty, and the Novel
- pp. 359-372
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0029
- The Highest of All the Arts: Kant and Poetry
- pp. 373-384
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0023
- The Decline of Literary Criticism
- pp. 385-392
- DOI: 10.1353/phl.0.0026
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Copyright © 2008 The Johns Hopkins University Press.