ANNOUNCEMENTS
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IMPORTANT NOTE FOR POTENTIAL MAJORS: owing to unavoidable circumstances, the gateway course will be taught in Spring this year, not Winter. Starting next year (2018-19), it will be back in Winter.

Monday, November 13, 5pm: a discussion with Roger Maioli about his new book, Empiricism and the Early Theory of the Novel. Cosponsored by the English department and the Seminar on the Enlightenment and Revolution. More...




The PhD minor in Philosophy, Literature, and the Arts enters its third year! Click here for details.





Now available for viewing / listening -- video and audio recordings of Philosophy and Literature events, including "The Philosophy of LOST," with actor Michael Emerson.

Videos from the "Narrative Self, Lyric Self, Absent Self" conference (February, 2013) are available here.




Every novel says to the reader: ‘Things are not as simple as you think.’ That is the novel's eternal truth, but it grows steadily harder to hear amid the din of easy, quick answers.—Milan Kundera

What is so fascinating about works like Plato's dialogues and Dostoevsky's novels? Can philosophy and literature, in such combinations, achieve more than the sum of the two parts? Can philosophical approaches account for the specific power of literary works, even those that are not overtly philosophical? And can literary devices contribute to philosophical goals—in a way, perhaps, that nothing else could?

Founded in 2004, the initiative in Philosophy and Literature brings together Stanford’s vibrant group of literary scholars and its renowned philosophy department to answer questions like these. The initiative currently comprises a set of undergraduate major tracks, a graduate student workshop, and faculty-led events. Recent interests of participating faculty include:

  • the nature and value of beauty
  • literature and cognitive science
  • literature and the limits of sense
  • irony and ironism
  • literature and self-fashioning
  • intention and interpretation
  • metaphor
  • mimesis and make-believe
  • non-semantic effects of literary texts
  • literature and moral improvement
  • styles and genres of philosophical writing

 

 

 

 


For representative writings and links by Stanford and non-Stanford writers alike, please browse our library. Here are a few books by affiliated Stanford authors:


Rome la Pluie The Party of Humanity Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity Self-Deception and Paradoxes of Rationality Genres in Dialogue Pushkin and Romantic Fiction Production of Presence Taste Philosophy as Fiction Fiction Sets You Free Hermes
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