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This book recovers the curious history of the "insensible" in the
Age of Sensibility. Tracking this figure through the English
novel's uneven and messy past, Wendy Anne Lee draws on
Enlightenment theories of the passions to place philosophy back
into conversation with narrative. Contemporary critical theory
often simplifies or disregards earlier accounts of emotions, while
eighteenth-century studies has focused on cultural histories of
sympathy. In launching a more philosophical inquiry about what
emotions are, Failures of Feeling corrects for both of these
oversights. Proposing a fresh take on emotions in the history of
the novel, its chapters open up literary history's most provocative
cases of unfeeling, from the iconic scrivener who would prefer not
to and the reviled stock figure of the prude, to the heroic rape
survivor, the burnt-out man-of-feeling, and the hard-hearted Jane
Austen herself. These pivotal cases of insensibility illustrate a
new theory of mind and of the novel predicated on an essential
paradox: the very phenomenon that would appear to halt feeling and
plot actually compels them. Contrary to the assumption that
fictional investment relies on a richness of interior life, Lee
shows instead that nothing incites the passions like dispassion.
This book recovers the curious history of the "insensible" in the
Age of Sensibility. Tracking this figure through the English
novel's uneven and messy past, Wendy Anne Lee draws on
Enlightenment theories of the passions to place philosophy back
into conversation with narrative. Contemporary critical theory
often simplifies or disregards earlier accounts of emotions, while
eighteenth-century studies has focused on cultural histories of
sympathy. In launching a more philosophical inquiry about what
emotions are, Failures of Feeling corrects for both of these
oversights. Proposing a fresh take on emotions in the history of
the novel, its chapters open up literary history's most provocative
cases of unfeeling, from the iconic scrivener who would prefer not
to and the reviled stock figure of the prude, to the heroic rape
survivor, the burnt-out man-of-feeling, and the hard-hearted Jane
Austen herself. These pivotal cases of insensibility illustrate a
new theory of mind and of the novel predicated on an essential
paradox: the very phenomenon that would appear to halt feeling and
plot actually compels them. Contrary to the assumption that
fictional investment relies on a richness of interior life, Lee
shows instead that nothing incites the passions like dispassion.
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