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The Personal Pilgrimage of David Lurie - Or Why Coetzee's Disgrace Should and Should Not Be Read in Terms of an Ethics of Perception

  • Nora Hämäläinen

Date Published:

3 June, 2013

Abstract:

Through a reading of J. M. Coetzee's novel Disgrace this paper discusses the contemporary genre of reading literature in terms of an "ethics of perception." In the fourteen years since its publication the novel has elicited a rich body of commentary and criticism with an ethical edge, often focusing on the unfolding vision or stunted but developing perceptiveness of its uneasy protagonist David Lurie. This path of criticism is paradigmatic of a broader interest in studying literary works as paths to moral philosophical illumination. I discuss how the novel yields to this kind of reading, but also how this path of reading is complicated by its various other features, above all, a plurality of values that may be hard to reconcile and a Christian perspective of grace which is played against the novels secular, intellectual perspective on perceptiveness. I argue that reading Disgrace in terms of any pre-given ethical formula, however compelling, may be problematic considering the nature of Coetzee's authorship.

 

 

June 2013: Nora Hämäläinen is a post-doctoral researcher affiliated with the University of Helsinki,. Her doctoral dissertation A Literary Turn (University of Helsinki, 2009) treated the roles of narrative literature in contemporary analytic moral philosophy. In 2009–2011 she worked as editor in chief of the Helsinki based cultural magazine Ny Tid. She has co-edited the anthologies Skilsmässoboken (The Divorce Book, Helsinki: Söderströms, 2008, with Solveig Arle), and Language, Ethics and Animal Life — Wittgenstein and  Beyond (New York: Bloomsbury, 2012, with Niklas Forsberg and Mikel Burley). She has written about philosophical methodology, the ethical uses of literature, moral change, and the philosophical work of Iris Murdoch. She is currently working on moral philosophy and the renegotiation of moral norms in self-help literature.

 

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 04/15/2020