On the Relevance of Literature to Life: The Significance of the Act of Reading

The European Legacy 7 (5):567-577 (2002)
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Abstract

What can literary education contribute to moral education? In this article the inherent practical, moral or political, relevance of literature and literary education is defended, which is opposed to a moralist approach to (children's) literature. A much debated danger in literature and the arts, viz. that it gives rise to a flight into a "promised land" instead of having relevance for real life and the real world, can be overcome by bringing to the fore the active part the reader plays in realizing the "world of the work." The classical idea of mimesis (i.e. of art mirroring reality) then makes room for a historicity of reading with an ongoing interplay of the (real) worlds of readers and the (fictive) world of the text. This idea is elaborated on from the point of view of Ricoeur's hermeneutics and from that of Iser's reception aesthetics, respectively. In realizing the world of the work the world of the reader is transcended and opened up towards the possible. In this reconfiguration lies the practical relevance of literature. Books, therefore, do not have to mirror the actual world in order to be morally or politically relevant. It is in the act of reading that the lasting significance of so-called classics is renewed time and time again.

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References found in this work

The logic of education.Paul Heywood Hirst - 1970 - London,: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Edited by R. S. Peters.
Real Presences.George Steiner - 1989 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Counter-Statement.[author unknown] - 1953 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 28 (3):469-470.
Review article.Wilna A. J. Meijer - 1994 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 13 (1):77-83.

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