Enacting and exploring ideas in fiction: The Overstory and The Portable Veblen

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Abstract

Philosophically engaged fiction often employs ideas in ways that reflect the exploitation-exploration dilemma in developmental psychology: by exploiting well articulated theories by enacting their conflicts, or by exploring the uncertainties of puzzling ontologies or moral complexities. We can see this in action in many works, but some novels of ideas seek to defy such categorization, with lessons for readers and writers. This paper analyzes two recent works – The Overstory by Richard Powers (2018) and Elizabeth McKenzie’s The Portable Veblen (2016) – to show how they deal with related concerns and settings through very different approaches. While Powers offers an enactment, its complexity seeks to evade the book becoming a simple polemic. McKenzie’s protagonist explores her muddled identity, philosophy and much else while flirting with the enactment of ideas when she does not comprehend.

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2023-07-05

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References found in this work

The Practice of Everyday Life.Michel de Certeau - 1988 - University of California Press.
A Pluralistic Universe.William James - 1909 - Mind 18 (72):576-588.
The Consolation of Philosophy.Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius - 1902 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Edited by David R. Slavitt.
Propositions, warranted assertibility, and truth.John Dewey - 1941 - Journal of Philosophy 38 (7):169-186.

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