This book introduces the reader to the ways in which happiness has been explored in philosophy and literature for thousands of years. The multidisciplinary approach of this book will appeal to a variety of readers from literary studies, critical theory, philosophy and psychology and anyone with an interest in happiness and theories of emotion.
This book introduces the reader to the ways in which happiness has been explored in philosophy and literature for thousands of years, in order to understand the newest theoretical approaches to happiness.
Jeffrey R. Di Leo draws on its long and rich history as a window into our present obsession with happiness. Each of the four chapters of this book provides a substantially different literary-theoretical account of how and why literature matters with respect to considerations of happiness. From the neoliberal happiness industry and the psychoanalytic rejection of happiness to aesthetic hedonism and revolutionary happiness, literature viewed from the perspective of happiness becomes a story about what is and is not the goal of life.
The multidisciplinary approach of this book will appeal to a variety of readers from literary studies, critical theory, philosophy and psychology and anyone with an interest in happiness and theories of emotion.
Introduction
1. The Brave New World of Well-Being: Happiness as a
Commodity from Huxley and Alain to Pharrell and Oprah
2. Happiness, No
Thanks!: Psychoanalysis, Philosophy, and the Critique of Happiness from Freud
to iek
3. The Happiness of the Text: Morality, Writing, and the Pursuit of
Pleasure from Gide to Barthes
4. Real Happiness is Revolutionary: Badiou,
Antiphilosophy, and the Metaphysics of Happiness from Spinoza and Pascal to
Mallarmé and Beckett
Jeffrey R. Di Leo is Professor of English and Philosophy at the University of Houston-Victoria, USA. He is editor and publisher of the American Book Review, founder and editor of the journal symplok, and Executive Director of the Society for Critical Exchange and its Winter Theory Institute.