Fall 2015

Judgment and the Novel

Listed in: Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought, as LJST-239

Faculty

Sharif Youssef (Section 01)

Description

This course approaches the problem of judgment and narrative in the context of a “crisis of judgment” that plagued the eighteenth-century novel and returned in the twentieth century. In this crisis, we see either a suspension of judgment (judgment is withheld, deemed condemnatory, moralizing, idiosyncratic) or an insistence that judgment be reached objectively, scientifically, or we see it as simply necessary. The novel stages and complicates this crisis. We will ask whether novels teach readers how to judge others or complicate and forestall judgment? In the first part of the course, we will look at other responses to the crisis of judgment, such as aesthetic and legal responses. We will think about what goes into a judgment; what makes a judgment legitimate; whether judgments even should be objective or intuitive; and what problems are posed by judicial discretion and precedent. We will read these in the context of historical work on common law legal judgment, record-keeping and stare decisis. We then turn back to the eighteenth century to broach the problem of judgment in moral and aesthetic writings. We will consider some major, but relatively short novels (that might include Haywood’s Fantomina: Or, Love in a Maze, Fielding’s Joseph Andrews, Austen’s Emma, Godwin’s Caleb Williams, Brown’s Wieland and, more recently, McEwan’s Saturday and St. Aubin’s Never Mind) with a view to how they stage the interrelated problems of judgment, subjectivity, and autonomy.

Limited to 30 students.  Fall semester.  Visiting Professor Youssef.

LJST 239 - L/D

Section 01
M 08:30 AM - 09:50 AM CONV 209
W 08:30 AM - 09:50 AM CONV 209

This is preliminary information about books for this course. Please contact your instructor or the Academic Coordinator for the department, before attempting to purchase these books.

ISBN Title Publisher Author(s) Comment Book Store Price
Emma Penguin Classics, 2008 Jane Austen Amherst Books TBD
Edgar Huntly, Or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker Penguin Classics, 1998 Charles Brockden Brown Amherst Books TBD
The Keep Anchor, 2007 Jennifer Egan Amherst Books TBD
My Dark Places Vintage, 1997 James Ellroy Amherst Books TBD
Joseph Andrews and Shamela Penguin Classics, 1999 Henry Fielding Amherst Books TBD
Fantomina and Other Works Broadview Press, 2004 Eliza Haywood Amherst Books TBD

These books are available locally at Amherst Books.

Offerings

2024-25: Not offered
Other years: Offered in Fall 2015