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Moral Development, Friendship and Self-deception in Dame Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone

Gåvertsson, Frits LU orcid (2016) Graduate Workshop on Fiction and Philosophy, 2016
Abstract
Dame Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone can profitably be read as shedding light on personal identity and moral development as well as how these connect to contemporary society, history, friendship, self-knowledge and self-deception in a way that ought to be of interest to classic perfectionist theories, i.e. ethical theories that develop an account of ethics informed by an account of the good human life understood in terms of the development of human nature. This essay deals with the role of literature in moral development, the benefits of first person narration, and Drabble’s historicism and its consequences for moral development and the metaphysics of the person. Furthermore I provide an Aristotelian reading of the role that friendship... (More)
Dame Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone can profitably be read as shedding light on personal identity and moral development as well as how these connect to contemporary society, history, friendship, self-knowledge and self-deception in a way that ought to be of interest to classic perfectionist theories, i.e. ethical theories that develop an account of ethics informed by an account of the good human life understood in terms of the development of human nature. This essay deals with the role of literature in moral development, the benefits of first person narration, and Drabble’s historicism and its consequences for moral development and the metaphysics of the person. Furthermore I provide an Aristotelian reading of the role that friendship plays in gaining self-knowledge in the narrative while taking into account the protagonist’s self-deception, which, I argue, is of importance in understanding personal development that is approaching but not yet nearing self-realisation. This last part is again interpreted along Aristotelian lines by relating it to the virtue of magnanimity. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
keywords
Margaret Drabble, Moral Development, Friendship, self-realization, Historicism, Magnanimity, Aristotle
conference name
Graduate Workshop on Fiction and Philosophy, 2016
conference location
Lund, Sweden
conference dates
2016-04-14 - 2016-04-15
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fed52e7c-daca-41d4-bbc2-54601e67c6a2
date added to LUP
2016-04-19 12:10:22
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:23:00
@misc{fed52e7c-daca-41d4-bbc2-54601e67c6a2,
  abstract     = {{Dame Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone can profitably be read as shedding light on personal identity and moral development as well as how these connect to contemporary society, history, friendship, self-knowledge and self-deception in a way that ought to be of interest to classic perfectionist theories, i.e. ethical theories that develop an account of ethics informed by an account of the good human life understood in terms of the development of human nature. This essay deals with the role of literature in moral development, the benefits of first person narration, and Drabble’s historicism and its consequences for moral development and the metaphysics of the person. Furthermore I provide an Aristotelian reading of the role that friendship plays in gaining self-knowledge in the narrative while taking into account the protagonist’s self-deception, which, I argue, is of importance in understanding personal development that is approaching but not yet nearing self-realisation. This last part is again interpreted along Aristotelian lines by relating it to the virtue of magnanimity.}},
  author       = {{Gåvertsson, Frits}},
  keywords     = {{Margaret Drabble; Moral Development; Friendship; self-realization; Historicism; Magnanimity; Aristotle}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Moral Development, Friendship and Self-deception in Dame Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}