Description

The Function of Evil Across Disciplinary Contexts explores answers to two important questions about the age-old theme of evil: is there any use in using the concept of evil in cultural, psychological, or other secular evaluations of the world and its productions? Most importantly, if there is, what might these functions be? By looking across several disciplines and analyzing evil as it is referenced across a broad spectrum of phenomena, this work demonstrates the varying ways that we interact with the ethical dilemma as academics, as citizens, and as people. The work draws from authors in different fields—including history, literary and film studies, philosophy, and psychology—and from around the world to provide an analysis of evil in such topics as deeply canonical as Beowulf and Shakespeare to subjects as culturally resonant as Stephen King, Captain America, or the War on Terror. By bringing together this otherwise disparate collection of scholarship, this collection reveals that discussions of evil across disciplines have always been questions of how cultures represent that which they find socially abhorrent. This work thus opens the conversation about evil outside of field-specific limitations, simultaneously demonstrating the assumptions that undergird the manner by which such a conversation proceeds.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Brian Johnson and Malcah Effron
1. Villainous Victimhood in Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado”
Chu-chueh Cheng
2. The Winter’s Tale: Art and Redemption from Evil
Olivia Coulomb
3. Guilt, Evil, and Hell in Doctor Faustus and Macbeth
Jamey Hecht
4. Seasonal Villainy: Radical Evil, Relativity and Redemptive Relationships
Charity Fowler
5. The Name-of-the-Monster: Interpellation and the Construction of Evil
Jim Casey
6. The Communicative Force of Evil: The Case of Stephen King
Jessica Folio
7. When Real Life Isn’t Evil Enough for Fiction: French Postwar Literature and the Relationship between Evil and Sexuality
Marian Duval
8. Poison and Antidote: Evil and the Hero-Villain Binary in Deon Meyer’s Post-Apartheid Crime Thriller, Devil’s Peak
Sam Naidu and Karlien van der Wielen
9. Ghosts of the Old South: The Evils of Slavery and the Haunted House in Royal Street
Brian Johnson
10. Ace in the Hole and Its Public: Evil and the News Spectacle
Julie Michot
11. The Evil Foreigner: Marvel Villains and the American National Identity from World War II to the War on Terror
Joanna Nowotny and Bettina Jossen
12. Tribalism and the Use of Evil in Modern Politics
Riven Barton
13. A “Fiend Incarnate”: Sin, Science, and the Problem of Evil in the New American Nation
Jeffrey Mullins

Product details

Published Feb 15 2017
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 244
ISBN 9781498533416
Imprint Lexington Books
Dimensions 237 x 160 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Malcah Effron

Anthology Editor

Brian Johnson

Contributor

Riven Barton

Contributor

Jim Casey

Contributor

Chu-chueh Cheng

Contributor

Olivia Coulomb

Contributor

Marion Duval

Contributor

Jessica Folio

Contributor

Charity Fowler

Contributor

Jamey Hecht

Contributor

Bettina Jossen

Contributor

Julie Michot

Contributor

Jeffrey Mullins

Contributor

Sam Naidu

Contributor

Joanna Nowotny

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