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Literary Criticism General

Uttering the Unutterable

Aristotle, Religion, and Literature

by (author) Louis F. Groarke

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Jan 2023
Category
General, Religious
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780228015239
    Publish Date
    Jan 2023
    List Price
    $120.00
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780228014232
    Publish Date
    Jan 2023
    List Price
    $120.00

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Description

Literature utters the unutterable, not through logic, not through science, not through argument, but through a pitch of eloquence so pronounced the conscientious reader cannot fail to pay attention.

Louis Groarke argues that literature is an honorific term we use to describe texts that are so overpowering they lift us to an encounter with an ineffable ultimate that is beyond logical or scientific explanation. In Uttering the Unutterable he proposes a wisdom epistemology that identifies an experience of transcendence as the defining criterion of literature. Offering four mutually reinforcing definitions of literature in line with Aristotle’s theory of four causes, Groarke compares the experience of reading to Aristotle’s account of philosophical contemplation and maintains that literature has inevitable ethical content. Moving beyond the Aristotelianism of the late Chicago School, Groarke presents a new synthesis that breaks through essentialist stereotypes and contends that literature, like religion, points to an ineffable transcendental, to something beyond what we can adequately explain, prove, systematize, quantify, or enclose in a theory.

Uttering the Unutterable explores how Aristotelian philosophy provides the most complete and compelling account of literature for philosophers, literary critics, and theorists.

About the author

Louis F. Groarke is full professor in the philosophy department of St Francis Xavier University and author of An Aristotelian Account of Induction and The Good Rebel.

Louis F. Groarke's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“Groarke’s fascinating book looks at what lifts literature above fleeting prose into something loftier and lasting.” *Atlantic Books Today *