Literature and Liberty: Essays in Libertarian Literary Criticism

Literature and Liberty: Essays in Libertarian Literary Criticism

by Allen Mendenhall
Literature and Liberty: Essays in Libertarian Literary Criticism

Literature and Liberty: Essays in Libertarian Literary Criticism

by Allen Mendenhall

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Overview

The economic theories of Karl Marx and his disciples continue to be anthologized in books of literary theory and criticism and taught in humanities classrooms to the exclusion of other, competing economic paradigms. Marxism is collectivist, predictable, monolithic, impersonal, linear, reductive — in short, wholly inadequate as an instrument for good in an era when we know better than to reduce the variety of human experience to simplistic formulae. A person’s creative and intellectual energies are never completely the products of culture or class. People are rational agents who choose between different courses of action based on their reason, knowledge, and experience. A person’s choices affect lives, circumstances, and communities. Even literary scholars who reject pure Marxism are still motivated by it, because nearly all economic literary theory derives from Marxism or advocates for vast economic interventionism as a solution to social problems.
Such interventionism, however, has a track-record of mass murder, war, taxation, colonization, pollution, imprisonment, espionage, and enslavement — things most scholars of imaginative literature deplore. Yet most scholars of imaginative literature remain interventionists. Literature and Liberty offers these scholars an alternative economic paradigm, one that over the course of human history has eliminated more generic bads than any other system. It argues that free market or libertarian literary theory is more humane than any variety of Marxism or interventionism. Just as Marxist historiography can be identified in the use of structuralism and materialist literary theory, so should free-market libertarianism be identifiable in all sorts of literary theory. Literature and Liberty disrupts the near monopolistic control of economic ideas in literary studies and offers a new mode of thinking for those who believe that arts and literature should play a role in discussions about law, politics, government, and economics. Drawing from authors as wide-ranging as Emerson, Shakespeare, E.M. Forster, Geoffrey of Monmouth, Henry Hazlitt, and Mark Twain, Literature and Liberty is a significant contribution to libertarianism and literary studies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739186343
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 02/19/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 180
File size: 844 KB

About the Author

Allen P. Mendenhall is adjunct professor at Faulkner University Thomas Goode Jones School of Law.

Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION:The Basis for Liberty
CHAPTER ONE:Emersonian Individualism
CHAPTER TWO:Liberty and Shakespeare
CHAPTER THREE:Law and Liberty in E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India
CHAPTER FOUR:A Tale of the Rise of Law: Geoffrey of Monmouth’s The History of the Kings of Britain
CHAPTER FIVE:Henry Hazlitt, Literary Critic
CHAPTER SIX:Bowdlerizing Huck
CHAPTER SEVEN:Literature, Transnational Law, and the Decline of the Nation-State
CONCLUSION:Towards a Libertarian Literary Theory
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