The Surprising Effects of Sympathy
Marivaux, Diderot, Rousseau, and Mary Shelley
Placing novels in the context of eighteenth-century writing about theater, fiction, and painting, Marshall argues that an unusual variety of authors and texts were concerned with the possibility of entering into someone else's thoughts and feelings. He shows how key eighteenth-century works reflect on the problem of how to move, touch, and secure the sympathy of readers and beholders in the realm of both "art" and "life." Marshall discusses the demands placed upon novels to achieve certain effects, the ambivalence of writers and readers about those effects, and the ways in which these texts can be read as philosophical meditations on the differences and analogies between the experiences of reading a novel, watching a play, beholding a painting, and witnessing the spectacle of someone suffering. The Surprising Effects of Sympathy traces the interaction of sympathy and theater and the artistic and philosophical problems that these terms represent in dialogues about aesthetics, moral philosophy, epistemology, psychology, autobiography, the novel, and society.
Introduction
1. The Surprising Effects of Sympathy
2. La Vie de Marianne, or the Accidents of Autobiography
3. La Religieuse: Sympathy and Seduction
4. Forgetting Theater
5. Rousseau and the State of Theater
6. Frankenstein, or Rousseau's Monster: Sympathy and Speculative Eyes
Appendix: Mary Shelley and Rousseau
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Index
Literature and Literary Criticism: British and Irish Literature | Romance Languages
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