Literature for a Society of Equals

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A01=Daniel S. Malachuk
Anna Barbauld
Author_Daniel S. Malachuk
Benito Cereno
Category=DSBH
Category=QD
Country House Poem
Devious
Epistemic Privilege
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Equals
Expanding Circle
Follow
Generalized Reciprocity
George Kateb
Global Boundary Stratotype Section
Heroic Slave
Hughes's Poem
Hughes’s Poem
literary canon expansion
Literature
Luck Egalitarians
Madison Washington
Mary Wollstonecraft
pessimist egalitarianism
political philosophy
Progressive Nationalists
reciprocity in literature
relational egalitarianism
Relational Equality
relational equality in modern literature
Revolutionary Social Contract
Rousseau's Insights
Rousseau’s Insights
social justice theory
Social Literature
Sunny
Textual Potency
Thoreau
Toussaint Louverture
Wollstonecraft
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032494234
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Literature for a Society of Equals defends modern equality and seeks its best literature. It accuses equality’s supposed friends on the left of attenuating this world-redefining relationship into a collection of rights and goods to distribute, secularizing it even as the right keeps sacralizing hierarchies, and optimistically handing it over to time to make it happen. In contrast, loyal to equality as modernity’s revolutionary invention, the writers examined here—from Mary Shelley to Gwendolyn Brooks to Ta-Nehisi Coates—envision "relational equality" as lately recovered by philosophers like Elizabeth Anderson and historians like Pierre Rosanvallon. Literary scholars need to reread these "pessimist egalitarians," too, though, for the discipline has failed them in the same three ways: i.e., attenuating and secularizing these writers’ portraits of equality but most of all insisting the sympathy generated by reading these texts will, with enough time, "expand the circle" of humanity. For students and teachers of literature at the university level, this volume is a guide to those writings that champion equality as relational, sacred, and ours—not time's—to realize.

Daniel S. Malachuk (PhD, Literatures in English, Rutgers) researches literature and political theory. Former Fellow at U. Notre Dame's Institute for Advanced Study (2013) and Fulbright Senior Lecturer at U. Heidelberg (2014), he is a Professor of English at Western Illinois University.

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